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Hyaluronidase inhibits reactive adipogenesis and inflammation of colon and skin
Tatsuya Dokoshi, … , Mikihiro Fujiya, Richard L. Gallo
Tatsuya Dokoshi, … , Mikihiro Fujiya, Richard L. Gallo
Published November 2, 2018
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2018;3(21):e123072. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.123072.
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Research Article Dermatology Inflammation

Hyaluronidase inhibits reactive adipogenesis and inflammation of colon and skin

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Abstract

In this study we evaluated the role of hyaluronan (HA) in reactive adipogenesis, a local expansion of preadipocytes that provides host defense by release of antimicrobial peptides. We observed that HA accumulated during maturation of adipocytes in vitro and was associated with increased expression of preadipocyte factor 1, zinc finger protein 423, and early B cell factor 1. Although HA is normally abundant in the extracellular matrix, a further increase in HA staining occurred in mice at sites of reactive adipogenesis following injury of colon by dextran sodium sulfate or injury of skin from infection with Staphylococcus aureus. HA also abundantly accumulated around adipocytes seen in the colons of patients with inflammatory bowel disease. This HA was necessary for adipocyte maturation because digestion of HA by administration of soluble hyaluronidase or transgenic expression of hyaluronidase 1 inhibited adipogenesis in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, hyaluronidase also suppressed inflammation of both skin and colon and decreased antimicrobial peptide expression by developing preadipocytes. This resulted in increased bacterial transit across the epithelial barrier despite decreased tissue injury from inflammation. These observations suggest HA plays an important role in reactive adipogenesis and host defense after injury.

Authors

Tatsuya Dokoshi, Ling-juan Zhang, Teruaki Nakatsuji, Christopher A. Adase, James A. Sanford, Rudolph D. Paladini, Hiroki Tanaka, Mikihiro Fujiya, Richard L. Gallo

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Figure 4

Reactive adipogenesis is inhibited by hyaluronidase.

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Reactive adipogenesis is inhibited by hyaluronidase.
(A) Representative ...
(A) Representative H&E histology of skin 3 days after infection with S. aureus. WT mice are compared with non-WT mice following the addition of hyaluronidase by transgenic expression during early embryogenesis (Ella/hyal1) or administration of PEGPH20. (B) Lipid droplet staining of frozen sections similar to A. (C) mRNA abundance from skin measured by qPCR of Cebpα (n = 6 mice/group). (D) Representative sections of distal colon from control, Ella/hyal1-injected, and PEGPH20-injected mice 7 days after being provided with 3% DSS colitis in drinking water. Tissue was stained with anti-PREF1/DLK antibodies. Brackets delineate submucosal region occupied by adipocytes. (E and F) Flow cytometry analysis of single-cell suspensions from the colon lamina propria showing expression of PDGFR-α and SCA1 from control, PEGPH20, DSS d7, and PEGPH20-treated DSS d7 mice. Cells were gated on CD31-negative, CD45-negative. Numbers represent the percentage of the cells in the indicated gate. (G) mRNA abundance measured by qPCR of Pref1 (n = 4 control or BADGE and PEGPH20 or 6 Ella/Hyal1 mice/group). Scale bar: 50 microns. Data in C and G are represented using box-and-whisker plots, with boxes representing the IQR, lines representing the median value, and whiskers representing minimum and maximum values, whereas data in F is represented as mean ± SEM; **P < 0.01 and ***P < 0.001 (Student’s t test). d0, day 0; d3, day 3; d7, day 7.

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