Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Department of Surgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
J Mol Med (Berl). 2024 Oct;102(10):1245-1254. doi: 10.1007/s00109-024-02478-w. Epub 2024 Aug 15.
Severe burn injuries are defined by a prolonged hypermetabolic response characterized by increases in resting energy expenditure, systemic catabolism, and multi-organ dysfunction. The sustained elevation of catecholamines following a burn injury is thought to significantly contribute to this hypermetabolic response, leading to changes in adipose tissue such as increased lipolysis and the browning of subcutaneous white adipose tissue (WAT). Failure to mitigate these adverse changes within the adipose tissue has been shown to exacerbate the post-burn hypermetabolic response and lead to negative outcomes. Propranolol, a non-selective β-blocker, has been clinically administered to improve outcomes of pediatric and adult burn patients, but there is inadequate knowledge of its effects on the distinct adipose tissue depots. In this study, we investigated the adipose depot-specific alterations that occur in response to burn injury. Moreover, we explored the therapeutic effects of β-adrenoceptor blockade via the drug propranolol in attenuating these burn-induced pathophysiological changes within the different fat depots. Using a murine model of thermal injury, we show that burn injury induces endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in the epididymal (eWAT) but not in the inguinal (iWAT) WAT depot. Conversely, burn injury induces the activation of key lipolytic pathways in both eWAT and iWAT depots. Treatment of burn mice with propranolol effectively mitigated adverse burn-induced alterations in the adipose by alleviating ER stress in the eWAT and reducing lipolysis in both depots. Furthermore, propranolol treatment in post-burn mice attenuated UCP1-mediated subcutaneous WAT browning following injury. Overall, our findings suggest that propranolol serves as an effective therapeutic intervention to mitigate the adverse changes induced by burn injury, including ER stress, lipotoxicity, and WAT browning, in both adipose tissue depots. KEY MESSAGES: Burn injury adversely affects adipose tissue metabolism via distinct changes in both visceral and subcutaneous adipose depots. Propranolol, a non-selective β-adrenergic blocker, attenuates many of the adverse adipose tissue changes mediated by burn injury.
严重烧伤定义为一种延长的代谢亢进反应,其特征为静息能量消耗增加、全身分解代谢和多器官功能障碍。烧伤后儿茶酚胺的持续升高被认为对这种代谢亢进反应有显著贡献,导致脂肪组织的变化,如脂肪分解增加和皮下白色脂肪组织(WAT)的棕色化。未能减轻脂肪组织中的这些不利变化已被证明会加剧烧伤后的代谢亢进反应,并导致不良后果。普萘洛尔是一种非选择性β-阻滞剂,已在临床上用于改善儿科和成人烧伤患者的预后,但对其对不同脂肪组织的影响知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们研究了烧伤反应引起的脂肪组织特定改变。此外,我们通过药物普萘洛尔探讨了β-肾上腺素能受体阻断的治疗效果,以减轻不同脂肪组织中这些烧伤引起的病理生理变化。使用热损伤的小鼠模型,我们发现烧伤诱导附睾(eWAT)而不是腹股沟(iWAT)白色脂肪组织(WAT)库中的内质网(ER)应激。相反,烧伤诱导两个 WAT 库中关键脂肪分解途径的激活。用普萘洛尔治疗烧伤小鼠可有效减轻脂肪组织中不良的烧伤诱导改变,减轻 eWAT 中的 ER 应激,并减少两个部位的脂肪分解。此外,烧伤后小鼠的普萘洛尔治疗可减轻 UCP1 介导的损伤后皮下 WAT 棕色化。总之,我们的研究结果表明,普萘洛尔是一种有效的治疗干预措施,可减轻烧伤引起的不良变化,包括内质网应激、脂肪毒性和 WAT 棕色化,在两个脂肪组织库中都有。