Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 2013 Aug;134(2):335-44. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kft108. Epub 2013 May 6.
Arsenic in drinking water promotes a number of diseases that may stem from dysfunctional adipose lipid and glucose metabolism. Arsenic inhibits adipocyte differentiation and promotes insulin resistance; however, little is known of the impacts of and mechanisms for arsenic effects on adipose lipid storage and lipolysis. Based on our earlier studies of arsenic-signaling mechanisms for vascular remodeling and inhibition of adipogenesis, we investigated the hypothesis that arsenic acts through specific adipocyte G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to promote lipolysis and decrease lipid storage. We first demonstrated that 5-week exposure of mice to 100 μg/l of arsenic in drinking water stimulated epididymal adipocyte hypertrophy, reduced the adipose tissue expression of perilipin (PLIN1, a lipid droplet coat protein), and increased perivascular ectopic fat deposition in skeletal muscle. Incubating adipocytes, differentiated from adipose-derived human mesenchymal stem cell, with arsenic stimulated lipolysis and decreased both Nile Red positive lipid droplets and PLIN1 expression. Arsenic-stimulated lipolysis was not associated with increased cAMP levels. However, preincubation of adipocytes with the Gi inhibitor, Pertussis toxin, attenuated As(III)-stimulated lipolysis and lipid droplet loss. Antagonizing Gi-coupled endothelin-1 type A and B receptors (EDNRA/EDNRB) also attenuated arsenic effects, but antagonizing other adipose Gi-coupled receptors that regulate fat metabolism was ineffective. The endothelin receptors have different roles in arsenic responses because only EDNRA inhibition prevented arsenic-stimulated lipolysis, but antagonists to either receptor protected lipid droplets and PLIN1 expression. These data support a role for specific GPCRs in arsenic signaling for aberrant lipid storage and metabolism that may contribute to the pathogenesis of metabolic disease caused by environmental arsenic exposures.
饮水中的砷会导致多种疾病,这些疾病可能源于脂肪组织中脂质和葡萄糖代谢的功能障碍。砷会抑制脂肪细胞分化,促进胰岛素抵抗;然而,人们对砷影响脂肪组织脂质储存和脂肪分解的机制知之甚少。基于我们之前对砷信号通路在血管重构和脂肪生成抑制方面的研究,我们提出了一个假设,即砷通过特定的脂肪细胞 G 蛋白偶联受体 (GPCR) 发挥作用,促进脂肪分解,减少脂质储存。我们首先证明,在饮用水中暴露于 100μg/l 的砷 5 周会刺激附睾脂肪细胞肥大,减少脂肪组织中 perilipin (PLIN1,一种脂肪滴外壳蛋白) 的表达,并增加骨骼肌周围异位脂肪沉积。用砷孵育从脂肪组织衍生的人间充质干细胞分化而来的脂肪细胞会刺激脂肪分解,减少尼罗红阳性脂滴和 PLIN1 的表达。砷刺激的脂肪分解与 cAMP 水平的增加无关。然而,用 Gi 抑制剂百日咳毒素预先孵育脂肪细胞会减弱 As(III)刺激的脂肪分解和脂滴丢失。拮抗 Gi 偶联的内皮素-1 型 A 和 B 受体 (EDNRA/EDNRB) 也会减弱砷的作用,但拮抗其他调节脂肪代谢的脂肪组织 Gi 偶联受体则无效。内皮素受体在砷反应中具有不同的作用,因为只有 EDNRA 抑制能阻止砷刺激的脂肪分解,而两种受体的拮抗剂都能保护脂滴和 PLIN1 的表达。这些数据支持特定 GPCR 在砷信号通路中发挥作用,导致异常的脂质储存和代谢,这可能导致环境砷暴露引起的代谢疾病的发病机制。