Department of Internal Medicine, Assisi Hospital, I-06081 Assisi, Perugia, Italy; Section of Internal Medicine, Endocrine, and Metabolic Sciences, Italy.
Section of Applied Biochemistry and Nutritional Sciences, Department of Internal Medicine, Perugia University, Perugia, Italy.
Free Radic Biol Med. 2013 Dec;65:811-820. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2013.08.007. Epub 2013 Aug 16.
The expansion of adipose tissue (AT) is, by definition, a hallmark of obesity. However, not all increases in fat mass are associated with pathophysiological cues. Indeed, whereas a "healthy" fat mass accrual, mainly in the subcutaneous depots, preserves metabolic homeostasis, explaining the occurrence of the metabolically healthy obese phenotype, "unhealthy" AT expansion is importantly associated with insulin resistance/type 2 diabetes and the metabolic syndrome. The development of a dysfunctional adipose organ may find mechanistic explanation in a reduced ability to recruit new and functional (pre)adipocytes from undifferentiated precursor cells. Such a failure of the adipogenic process underlies the "AT expandability" paradigm. The inability of AT to expand further to store excess nutrients, rather than obesity per se, induces a diabetogenic milieu by promoting the overflow and the ectopic deposition of fatty acids in insulin-dependent organs (i.e., lipotoxicity), the secretion of various metabolically detrimental adipose-derived hormones (i.e., adipokines and lipokines), and the occurrence of local and systemic inflammation and oxidative stress. Hitherto, fatty acids (i.e., lipokines) and the oxidation by-products of cholesterol and polyunsaturated fatty acids, such as nonenzymatic oxysterols and reactive aldehyde species, respectively, emerge as key modulators of (pre)adipocyte signaling through Wnt/β-catenin and MAPK pathways and potential regulators of glucose homeostasis. These and other mechanistic insights linking adipose dysfunction, oxidative stress, and impairment of glucose homeostasis are discussed in this review article, which focuses on adipose peroxidation as a potential instigator of, and a putative therapeutic target for, obesity-associated metabolic dysfunctions.
脂肪组织(AT)的扩张,根据定义,是肥胖的一个标志。然而,并非所有脂肪量的增加都与病理生理学线索有关。事实上,虽然“健康”的脂肪量积累,主要在皮下脂肪储存中,维持代谢平衡,解释了代谢健康肥胖表型的发生,但“不健康”的 AT 扩张与胰岛素抵抗/2 型糖尿病和代谢综合征密切相关。功能失调的脂肪器官的发展可能可以从分化前体细胞中募集新的和功能正常(前)脂肪细胞的能力降低中找到机制解释。这种脂肪生成过程的失败是“AT 可扩展性”范例的基础。AT 无法进一步扩张以储存多余的营养物质,而不是肥胖本身,通过促进脂肪酸在胰岛素依赖的器官中的溢出和异位沉积(即脂毒性)、各种代谢有害的脂肪衍生激素(即 adipokines 和 lipokines)的分泌以及局部和全身炎症和氧化应激的发生,诱导糖尿病环境。迄今为止,脂肪酸(即 lipokines)和胆固醇和多不饱和脂肪酸的氧化产物,如非酶性氧化固醇和反应性醛类物质,分别作为 Wnt/β-catenin 和 MAPK 途径中(前)脂肪细胞信号的关键调节剂,以及葡萄糖稳态的潜在调节剂。本文重点讨论了脂肪功能障碍、氧化应激和葡萄糖稳态受损之间的这些和其他机制见解,脂肪过氧化作为肥胖相关代谢功能障碍的潜在启动子和潜在治疗靶点。