Abstract

Monoamine oxidase (MAO) and semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) activities are very high in white adipose tissue (WAT). SSAO, also known as Vascular Adhesion Protein-1 in vessels, is present at the surface of fat cells and independent approaches have evidenced its impressive increase during adipogenesis. However, the factors that might regulate the expression SSAO and MAO in adipose tissue are still poorly defined. Here, we report the influence of fasting on MAO and SSAO activities in adipose depots. A decrease of MAO activity occurred after three days of starvation in the intra-abdominal adipose tissue (INWAT) of male Wistar rats, regardless of their initial adiposity or fat loss. The reduced fat stores of seven-week old rats, loosing 59 % of INWAT mass during fasting, contained only one half of the MAO activity found in fed control. The same reduction of MAO was observed after prolonged fasting in older rats which lose only 26% of their INWAT during the same starvation duration, leading to a fat mass comparable to that of younger fed control rats. It was therefore the endocrine and metabolic changes occurring during fasting that were responsible for the reduced MAO activity and not the amount of INWAT. Surprisingly, SSAO activity remained unchanged during starvation. In subcutaneous WAT, the changes in MAO and SSAO activities exhibited the same tendencies than those found in INWAT. Taken together, these data show that both MAO and SSAO activities increase in INWAT with age-dependent fattening, and indicate that only MAO diminishes during fasting.

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