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Human adipose tissue microvascular endothelial cells secrete PPARγ ligands and regulate adipose tissue lipid uptake
Silvia Gogg, … , Jan Boren, Ulf Smith
Silvia Gogg, … , Jan Boren, Ulf Smith
Published March 7, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2019;4(5):e125914. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.125914.
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Research Article Cell biology

Human adipose tissue microvascular endothelial cells secrete PPARγ ligands and regulate adipose tissue lipid uptake

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Abstract

Human adipose cells cannot secrete endogenous PPARγ ligands and are dependent on unknown exogenous sources. We postulated that the adipose tissue microvascular endothelial cells (aMVECs) cross-talk with the adipose cells for fatty acid (FA) transport and storage and also may secrete PPARγ ligands. We isolated aMVECs from human subcutaneous adipose tissue and showed that in these cells, but not in (pre)adipocytes from the same donors, exogenous FAs increased cellular PPARγ activation and markedly increased FA transport and the transporters FABP4 and CD36. Importantly, aMVECs only accumulated small lipid droplets and could not be differentiated to adipose cells and are not adipose precursor cells. FA exchange between aMVECs and adipose cells was bidirectional, and FA-induced PPARγ activation in aMVECs was dependent on functional adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) protein while deleting hormone-sensitive lipase in aMVECs had no effect. aMVECs also released lipids to the medium, which activated PPARγ in reporter cells as well as in adipose cells in coculture experiments, and this positive cross-talk was also dependent on functional ATGL in aMVECs. In sum, aMVECs are highly specialized endothelial cells, cannot be differentiated to adipose cells, are adapted to regulating lipid transport and secreting lipids that activate PPARγ, and thus, regulate adipose cell function.

Authors

Silvia Gogg, Annika Nerstedt, Jan Boren, Ulf Smith

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Figure 3

aMVEC/adipocyte cross-talk.

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aMVEC/adipocyte cross-talk.
(A and B) Experimental design with Thincert ...
(A and B) Experimental design with Thincert coculture with the long-chain FA analog fluorescent BODIPY-500/510 C1, C12: Adipocytes and aMVECs were independently seeded in the bottom of a culture dish or on the insert membrane. **BODIPY was added to the monocultures and then combined with the opposite unlabeled population, as shown in the schematic figures. (C and D) Microphotographs showing aMVECs and adipocytes cross-talk. aMVECs previously exposed to OA and partially differentiated PAs were grown independently as described. The differentiated PAs (PA diff) and aMVECs filled with lipids were incubated with 3 μM fluorescent BODIPY for 3 hours (upper microphotographs). After a thorough wash of the excess label with PBS, the labeled and not labeled cells were paired as shown in the figures (A) and (B), and the microphotographs were taken after 48 hours of coculture (bottom microphotographs). Original magnification, ×100 (left); ×400 (right).

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