Abstract

ContextPeripheral lower body fat is associated with lower cardiometabolic risk. Physiological differences in gluteal compared to abdominal subcutaneous (sc) adipocyte functions are known but the molecular basis for depot differences in adipocyte function is poorly understood.ObjectiveTo identify novel gene regulatory pathways that underlie the heterogeneity of human fat distribution.Design and methodsAbdominal and gluteal adipose tissue aspirates obtained from 35 subjects (age=30±1.6 years; BMI=27.3±1.3kg/m2) were analyzed using Illumina microarrays and confirmed by RT-PCR. The HOTAIR gene was stably transfected into primary cultured human abdominal sc preadipocytes using a lentivirus and effects on adipogenic differentiation were analyzed.ResultsWe identified a long non-coding RNA, HOTAIR that was expressed in gluteal but not in Abd sc adipose tissue. This difference was retained throughout in vitro differentiation and was maximal at day 4. Ectopic expression of HOTAIR in abdominal preadipocytes produced an increase in differentiation as reflected by a higher percentage of differentiated cells, and increased expression of key adipogenic genes including PPARγ and LPL.ConclusionHOTAIR is expressed in gluteal adipose and may regulate key processes in adipocyte differentiation. The role of this lncRNA in determining the metabolic properties of gluteal compared to abdominal adipocytes merits further study.

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