Division of Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States.
Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27834, United States.
Biochem Pharmacol. 2022 May;199:115012. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2022.115012. Epub 2022 Apr 5.
Obesity is a chronic, relapsing condition characterized by excess body fat. Its prevalence has increased globally since the 1970s, and the number of obese and overweight people is now greater than those underweight. Obesity is a multifactorial condition, and as such, many components contribute to its development and pathogenesis. This is the first of three companion reviews that consider obesity. This review focuses on the genetics, viruses, insulin resistance, inflammation, gut microbiome, and circadian rhythms that promote obesity, along with hormones, growth factors, and organs and tissues that control its development. It shows that the regulation of energy balance (intake vs. expenditure) relies on the interplay of a variety of hormones from adipose tissue, gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, liver, and brain. It details how integrating central neurotransmitters and peripheral metabolic signals (e.g., leptin, insulin, ghrelin, peptide YY) is essential for controlling energy homeostasis and feeding behavior. It describes the distinct types of adipocytes and how fat cell development is controlled by hormones and growth factors acting via a variety of receptors, including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma, retinoid X, insulin, estrogen, androgen, glucocorticoid, thyroid hormone, liver X, constitutive androstane, pregnane X, farnesoid, and aryl hydrocarbon receptors. Finally, it demonstrates that obesity likely has origins in utero. Understanding these biochemical drivers of adiposity and metabolic dysfunction throughout the life cycle lends plausibility and credence to the "obesogen hypothesis" (i.e., the importance of environmental chemicals that disrupt these receptors to promote adiposity or alter metabolism), elucidated more fully in the two companion reviews.
肥胖是一种以体脂过多为特征的慢性、易复发的病症。自 20 世纪 70 年代以来,它在全球范围内的发病率不断上升,肥胖和超重人群的数量现在超过了体重过轻的人群。肥胖是一种多因素的病症,因此,许多因素都促成了它的发展和发病机制。这是三篇相关综述中的第一篇,主要探讨肥胖问题。本篇综述主要关注促进肥胖的遗传因素、病毒、胰岛素抵抗、炎症、肠道微生物群和昼夜节律,以及控制肥胖发展的激素、生长因子、器官和组织。综述表明,能量平衡(摄入与消耗)的调节依赖于脂肪组织、胃肠道、胰腺、肝脏和大脑中的多种激素的相互作用。详细说明了中枢神经递质和外周代谢信号(如瘦素、胰岛素、胃饥饿素、肽 YY)的整合对于控制能量稳态和摄食行为是至关重要的。同时,还描述了不同类型的脂肪细胞,以及激素和生长因子如何通过各种受体(包括过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体-γ、视黄酸 X 受体、胰岛素受体、雌激素受体、雄激素受体、糖皮质激素受体、甲状腺激素受体、肝 X 受体、组成型雄烷受体、孕烷 X 受体、法尼醇 X 受体和芳烃受体)控制脂肪细胞的发育。最后,还证明肥胖很可能起源于胎儿期。理解这些贯穿生命周期的脂肪形成和代谢功能障碍的生化驱动因素,为“肥胖诱导物假说”提供了可信度和依据,该假说认为环境化学物质对这些受体的干扰会促进肥胖或改变代谢,这在两篇相关综述中得到了更全面的阐述。