Abstract

Diet-induced obesity can cause metabolic syndromes. The critical link in disease progression is adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) recruitment, which drives low-level inflammation, triggering adipocyte dysfunction. It is unclear whether ubiquitin-specific proteinase 14 (USP14) affects metabolic disorders by mediating adipose tissue inflammation. In the present study, we showed that USP14 is highly expressed in ATMs of obese human patients and diet-induced obese mice. Mouse USP14 overexpression aggravated obesity-related insulin resistance by increasing the levels of pro-inflammatory ATMs, leading to adipose tissue inflammation, excessive lipid accumulation, and hepatic steatosis. In contrast, USP14 knockdown in adipose tissues alleviated the phenotypes induced by a high-fat diet. Co-culture experiments showed that USP14 deficiency in macrophages led to decreased adipocyte lipid deposition and enhanced insulin sensitivity, suggesting that USP14 plays an important role in ATMs. Mechanistically, USP14 interacted with TNF receptor-associated 6, preventing K48-linked ubiquitination as well as proteasome degradation, leading to increased pro-inflammatory polarization of macrophages. In contrast, the pharmacological inhibition of USP14 significantly ameliorated diet-induced hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance in mice. Our results demonstrated that macrophage USP14 restriction constitutes a key constraint on the pro-inflammatory M1 phenotype, thereby inhibiting obesity-related metabolic diseases.

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