Abstract

Due to the inability to curb the excessive increase in the prevalence of obesity and overweight, it is necessary to comprehend in more detail the factors involved in the pathophysiology and to appreciate more clearly the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of obesity. Thus, understanding the biological regulation of adipose tissue is of fundamental relevance. Connexin, a protein that forms intercellular membrane channels of gap junctions and unopposed hemichannels, plays a key role in adipogenesis and in the maintenance of adipose tissue homeostasis. The expression and function of Connexin 43 (Cx43) during the different stages of the adipogenesis are differentially regulated. Moreover, it has been shown that cell–cell communication decreases dramatically upon differentiation into adipocytes. Furthermore, inhibition of Cx43 degradation or constitutive overexpression of Cx43 blocks adipocyte differentiation. In the first events of adipogenesis, the connexin is highly phosphorylated, which is likely associated with enhanced Gap Junction (GJ) communication. In an intermediate state of adipocyte differentiation, Cx43 phosphorylation decreases, as it is displaced from the membrane and degraded through the proteasome; thus, Cx43 total protein is reduced. Cx is involved in cardiac disease as well as in obesity-related cardiovascular diseases. Different studies suggest that obesity together with a high-fat diet are related to the production of remodeling factors associated with expression and distribution of Cx43 in the atrium.

Highlights

  • Obesity and overweight are defined as an excessive or abnormal accumulation of adipose tissue with health-risk consequences

  • The results revealed that liraglutide restored Connexin 43 (Cx43) obesity-associated altered levels, without significant changes in animal body weight [130]

  • Cx43 is involved in adipogenesis regulation and homeostasis maintenance

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity and overweight are defined as an excessive or abnormal accumulation of adipose tissue with health-risk consequences. In an initial stage of differentiation, cellular processes activate proteins belonging to the Activator protein 1 (AP1) family of transcription factors, which leads to the expression of the receptor activated by Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ). This transcription factor is considered the master regulator of adipogenesis, since it regulates the expression of a large number of genes related to cell differentiation and the accumulation of lipids in the cell [12,13,14,15,16]. In addition to positive adipogenesis regulators, important and potent negative regulators have been described, which include proteins from the GATA and WNT family [18,19,20,21,22,23,24]

Connexin Forms Gap Junction Channels and Hemichannels
Conclusions
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