Ivatt Lisa, Paul Mhairi, Miguelez-Crespo Allende, Hadoke Patrick W F, Bailey Matthew A, Morgan Ruth A, Nixon Mark
Centre for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Scotland's Rural College, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2025 Jan 24;24(1):39. doi: 10.1186/s12933-025-02596-w.
Obesity, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), is associated with hypertension and vascular dysfunction. Perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT), a metabolically active tissue surrounding blood vessels, plays a key role in regulating vascular tone. In obesity, PVAT becomes dysregulated which may contribute to vascular dysfunction; how sex impacts the remodelling of PVAT and thus the altered vascular contractility during obesity is unclear.
To investigate sex-specific PVAT dysregulation in the setting of obesity as a potential driver of sex differences in vascular pathologies and CVD risk.
Adult male and female C57Bl/6J mice were fed an obesogenic high-fat diet (HFD) or regular chow for 16 weeks. Mesenteric PVAT (mPVAT) was isolated for RNA-sequencing and histological analysis, and mesenteric arteries were isolated for assessment of vascular function by wire myography. In a separate study, female mice were subjected to bilateral ovariectomy prior to dietary intervention to determine the contribution of ovarian hormones to PVAT dysregulation.
Transcriptomic analysis of mPVAT revealed sexually dimorphic responses to HFD, with upregulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling pathways in male but not female mice. Histological and RT-qPCR approaches demonstrated increased collagen deposition and ECM remodelling in mPVAT from obese male compared with obese female mice. Assessment of vascular function in mesenteric arteries -/+ PVAT revealed that in obesity, mPVAT impaired endothelium-mediated vasodilation in male but not female mice. Ovariectomy of female mice prior to HFD administration did not alter ECM transcript expression or collagen deposition in mPVAT compared to sham-operated female mice.
Obesity induces sex-specific molecular remodelling in mPVAT, with male mice exhibiting unique upregulation of ECM pathways and increased collagen deposition compared to females. Moreover, the relative protection of female mice from obesity-induced mPVAT dysregulation is not mediated by ovarian hormones. These data highlight a potential sex-specific mechanistic link between mPVAT and mesenteric artery dysfunction in obesity, and provides crucial insights for future development of treatment strategies that consider the unique cardiovascular risks in men and women.
肥胖是心血管疾病(CVD)的主要危险因素,与高血压和血管功能障碍有关。血管周围脂肪组织(PVAT)是血管周围的一种代谢活跃组织,在调节血管张力方面起关键作用。在肥胖状态下,PVAT会失调,这可能导致血管功能障碍;性别如何影响肥胖期间PVAT的重塑以及由此改变的血管收缩性尚不清楚。
研究肥胖情况下性别特异性的PVAT失调,这可能是血管病变和CVD风险中性别差异的潜在驱动因素。
将成年雄性和雌性C57Bl/6J小鼠喂食致肥胖的高脂饮食(HFD)或常规饲料16周。分离肠系膜PVAT(mPVAT)进行RNA测序和组织学分析,并分离肠系膜动脉通过线肌张力测定法评估血管功能。在另一项研究中,雌性小鼠在饮食干预前进行双侧卵巢切除术,以确定卵巢激素对PVAT失调的作用。
mPVAT的转录组分析显示对HFD存在性别差异反应,细胞外基质(ECM)重塑途径在雄性而非雌性小鼠中上调。组织学和RT-qPCR方法表明,与肥胖雌性小鼠相比,肥胖雄性小鼠的mPVAT中胶原沉积增加且ECM重塑增强。对带或不带PVAT的肠系膜动脉血管功能评估显示,在肥胖状态下,mPVAT损害了雄性而非雌性小鼠的内皮介导的血管舒张。与假手术雌性小鼠相比,在给予HFD前对雌性小鼠进行卵巢切除术并未改变mPVAT中的ECM转录表达或胶原沉积。
肥胖诱导mPVAT发生性别特异性分子重塑,与雌性小鼠相比,雄性小鼠表现出ECM途径的独特上调和胶原沉积增加。此外,雌性小鼠对肥胖诱导的mPVAT失调的相对保护作用不是由卵巢激素介导的。这些数据突出了肥胖中mPVAT与肠系膜动脉功能障碍之间潜在的性别特异性机制联系,并为未来考虑男女独特心血管风险的治疗策略的开发提供了关键见解。