Abstract

Obesity during childhood and beyond may have its origins during fetal or early postnatal life. At present, there are no suitable in vivo experimental models to study factors that modulate or perturb human fetal white adipose tissue (WAT) expansion, remodeling, development, adipogenesis, angiogenesis, or epigenetics. We have developed such a model. It involves the xenotransplantation of midgestation human WAT into the renal subcapsular space of immunocompromised SCID-beige mice. After an initial latency period of approximately 2 weeks, the tissue begins expanding. The xenografts are healthy and show robust expansion and angiogenesis for at least 2 months following transplantation. Data and cell size and gene expression are consistent with active angiogenesis. The xenografts maintain the expression of genes associated with differentiated adipocyte function. In contrast to the fetal tissue, adult human WAT does not engraft. The long-term viability and phenotypic maintenance of fetal adipose tissue following xenotransplantation may be a function of its autonomous high rates of adipogenesis and angiogenesis. Through the manipulation of the host mice, this model system offers the opportunity to study the mechanisms by which nutrients and other environmental factors affect human adipose tissue development and biology.

Highlights

  • Obesity during childhood and beyond may have its origins during fetal or early postnatal life

  • With this circumstance in mind, and with a particular interest in studying the fetal epigenetic programming of adipose tissue development, we explored the xenotransplantation of midgestation human fetal adipose tissue into immunocompromised rodents

  • The result of this work was the establishment of a new model system to investigate human white adipose tissue (WAT) biology and development

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity during childhood and beyond may have its origins during fetal or early postnatal life. There are no suitable in vivo experimental models to study factors that modulate or perturb human fetal white adipose tissue (WAT) expansion, remodeling, development, adipogenesis, angiogenesis, or epigenetics. Journal of Lipid Research Volume 55, 2014 2685 or induced overexpression of proangiogenic, prosurvival agents [15, 16], xenotransplantation has not been utilized as an approach to study adipogenesis or adipose tissue remodeling. The result of this work was the establishment of a new model system to investigate human WAT biology and development

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