Abstract

To determine the correlation between obesity and insulin resistance in skeletal muscle and liver tissues, this study isolates exosomes from adipose tissue under obese conditions and investigates the effect of adipose tissue-derived exosomes (Ad-exosomes) in mouse muscle (C2C12 cells) and liver cell lines (AML12 cells). The study isolates exosomes from the adipose tissue of normal diet-fed mice or high-fat diet (HFD)-fed obese mice and confirms the uptake into differentiated C2C12 and AML12 cells. Ad-exosomes from HFD-fed mice induce insulin resistance, triglyceride (TG) accumulation, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and inflammation in both C2C12 and AML12 cells. Interestingly, the study finds that the TG accumulation induces by Ad-exosomes from HFD-fed obese mice is dramatically increased in AML12 cells compared with that in the differentiated C2C12 cells, and glucose uptake following the same treatment is decreased in C2C12 cells and increased in AML12 cells. In addition, Ad-exosomes from HFD-fed obese mice cause not only TG accumulation but also lipogenesis in AML12 cells. The results suggest that Ad-exosomes from HFD-fed obese mice cause insulin resistance in both the muscles and liver, but their effects on metabolism during the development of insulin resistance vary between tissues.

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