Abstract

Failure of white adipose tissue to appropriately store excess metabolic substrate seems to underpin obesity-associated type 2 diabetes. Encouraging “browning” of white adipose has been suggested as a therapeutic strategy to help dispose of excess stored lipid and ameliorate the resulting insulin resistance. Genetic variation at the DNA locus encoding the novel proteolipid neuronatin has been associated with obesity, and we recently observed that neuronatin expression is reduced in subcutaneous adipose tissue from obese humans. Thus, to explore the function of neuronatin further, we used RNAi to silence its expression in murine primary adipocyte cultures and examined the effects on adipocyte phenotype. We found that primary adipocytes express only the longer isoform of neuronatin. Loss of neuronatin led to increased mitochondrial biogenesis, indicated by greater intensity of MitoTracker Green staining. This was accompanied by increased expression of UCP1 and the key genes in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, PGC-1α, Cox8b, and Cox4 in primary subcutaneous white adipocytes, indicative of a “browning” effect. In addition, phosphorylation of AMPK and ACC was increased, suggestive of increased fatty acid utilization. Similar, but less pronounced, effects of neuronatin silencing were also noted in primary brown adipocytes. In contrast, loss of neuronatin caused a reduction in both basal and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis, likely mediated by a reduction in Glut1 protein upon silencing of neuronatin. In contrast, loss of neuronatin had no effect on insulin signaling. In conclusion, neuronatin appears to be a novel regulator of browning and metabolic substrate disposal in white adipocytes.

Highlights

  • SUSTAINED ADIPOSE TISSUE REMODELING appears to be instrumental in preventing the development of insulin resistance (IR) and type 2 diabetes in obese subjects [35]

  • We noted that neuronatin expression is reduced in adipose tissue in obese humans and that loss of neuronatin in primary adipocytes substantially impairs basal glucose uptake and glycogen synthesis

  • We provide evidence that neuronatin may contribute to the regulation of adipocyte phenotype, since it acts as a negative regulator of the “brite” gene expression program in adipocytes from murine iWA

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Summary

Introduction

SUSTAINED ADIPOSE TISSUE REMODELING appears to be instrumental in preventing the development of insulin resistance (IR) and type 2 diabetes in obese subjects [35]. Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is characterized by the presence of many smaller lipid droplets and large numbers of mitochondria, in which substrate oxidation is uncoupled from phosphorylation due to the expression of uncoupling protein-1. We recently showed that subcutaneous neuronatin expression declines with increasing obesity in humans [14], suggesting that the role of neuronatin in adipocytes merited more detailed investigation. It is not known which isoform of neuronatin is expressed in adipocytes, and there have been no mechanistic studies published that have explored the role of neuronatin in adipocytes. Given the potential role of neuronatin in regulating adipocyte metabolism, we studied the impact of RNAi-mediated loss of neuronatin expression in subcutaneous primary adipocytes on key indicators of adipocyte phenotype and glucose disposal

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