Abstract

Adaptation to changes in energy availability is pivotal for the survival of animals. Adipose tissue, the body’s largest reservoir of energy and a major source of metabolic fuel, exerts a buffering function for fluctuations in nutrient availability. This functional plasticity ranges from energy storage in the form of triglycerides during periods of excess energy intake to energy mobilization via lipolysis in the form of free fatty acids for other organs during states of energy demands. The subtle balance between energy storage and mobilization is important for whole-body energy homeostasis; its disruption has been implicated as contributing to the development of insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes and cancer cachexia. As a result, adipocyte lipolysis is tightly regulated by complex regulatory mechanisms involving lipases and hormonal and biochemical signals that have opposing effects. In thermogenic brown and brite adipocytes, lipolysis stimulation is the canonical way for the activation of non-shivering thermogenesis. Lipolysis proceeds in an orderly and delicately regulated manner, with stimulation through cell-surface receptors via neurotransmitters, hormones, and autocrine/paracrine factors that activate various intracellular signal transduction pathways and increase kinase activity. The subsequent phosphorylation of perilipins, lipases, and cofactors initiates the translocation of key lipases from the cytoplasm to lipid droplets and enables protein-protein interactions to assemble the lipolytic machinery on the scaffolding perilipins at the surface of lipid droplets. Although activation of lipolysis has been well studied, the feedback fine-tuning is less well appreciated. This review focuses on the molecular brakes of lipolysis and discusses some of the divergent fine-tuning strategies in the negative feedback regulation of lipolysis, including delicate negative feedback loops, intermediary lipid metabolites-mediated allosteric regulation and dynamic protein–protein interactions. As aberrant adipocyte lipolysis is involved in various metabolic diseases and releasing the brakes on lipolysis in thermogenic adipocytes may activate thermogenesis, targeting adipocyte lipolysis is thus of therapeutic interest.

Highlights

  • Maintaining whole-body energy homeostasis during times of dramatic fluctuations in energy supply and demand is a fundamental property of animal life

  • Deficiency in this ability is implicated in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases such as insulin resistance (IR), type 2 diabetes (T2D) and cancer cachexia

  • Adipose lipolysis provides metabolic fuel for the whole body, and produces products that act as signaling molecules and transcriptional modulators, which are essential for preserving adipocyte function

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Summary

Introduction

Maintaining whole-body energy homeostasis during times of dramatic fluctuations in energy supply and demand is a fundamental property of animal life. Adipocyte lipolysis requires delicate regulations at the physiological level by hormones that have opposing effects as well as by autocrine/paracrine feedback mechanisms to provide a balance between energy storage and mobilization (Figure 2).

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