SORLA is required for insulin-induced expansion of the adipocyte precursor pool in visceral fat
Abstract
Visceral adipose tissue shows remarkable plasticity, constantly replacing mature adipocytes from an inherent pool of adipocyte precursors. The number of precursors is set in the juvenile organism and remains constant in adult life. Which signals drive precursor pool expansion in juveniles and why they operate in visceral but not in subcutaneous white adipose tissue (WAT) are unclear. Using mouse models, we identified the insulin-sensitizing receptor SORLA as a molecular factor explaining the distinct proliferative capacity of visceral WAT. High levels of SORLA activity in precursors of juvenile visceral WAT prime these cells for nutritional stimuli provided through insulin, promoting mitotic expansion of the visceral precursor cell pool in overfed juvenile mice. SORLA activity is low in subcutaneous precursors, blunting their response to insulin and preventing diet-induced proliferation of this cell type. Our findings provide a molecular explanation for the unique proliferative properties of juvenile visceral WAT, and for the genetic association of SORLA with visceral obesity in humans. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000517071Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
The Journal of Cell BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Rockefeller University PressOrganisational unit
03819 - Wolfrum, Christian / Wolfrum, Christian
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