Adipsin and adipocyte-derived C3aR1 regulate thermogenic fat in a sex-dependent fashion
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ma, Lunkun; Gilani, Ankit; Rubio-Navarro, Alfonso; Cortada, Eric; Li, Ang; Reilly, Shannon M; Tang, Liling; Lo, James CEditorial
American Society for Clinical Investigation
Materia
Inflammation Metabolism Adipose tissues
Fecha
2024-05-07Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Ma L, Gilani A, Rubio-Navarro A, Cortada E, Li A, Reilly SM, Tang L, Lo JC. Adipsin and adipocyte-derived C3aR1 regulate thermogenic fat in a sex-dependent fashion. JCI Insight. 2024 May 7; 9 (11): e178925. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.178925. PMID: 38713526; PMCID: PMC11382875.
Patrocinador
China Scholarship Council Scholarship (201906050127); American Diabetes Association (9-22-PDFPM-01); NIH R01 DK121140; R01 DK121844; R01 DK132879; R01 DK126944Resumen
Thermogenesis in beige/brown adipose tissues can be leveraged to combat metabolic disorders such as type 2 diabetes and obesity. The complement system plays pleiotropic roles in metabolic homeostasis and organismal energy balance with canonical effects on immune cells and noncanonical effects on nonimmune cells. The adipsin/C3a/C3a receptor 1 (C3aR1) pathway stimulates insulin secretion and sustains pancreatic β cell mass. However, its role in adipose thermogenesis has not been defined. Here, we show that male Adipsin/Cfd-knockout mice exhibited increased energy expenditure and white adipose tissue (WAT) browning. In addition, male adipocyte-specific C3aR1-knockout mice exhibited enhanced WAT thermogenesis and increased respiration. In stark contrast, female adipocyte-specific C3aR1-knockout mice displayed decreased brown fat thermogenesis and were cold intolerant. Female mice expressed lower levels of Adipsin in thermogenic adipocytes and adipose tissues than males. C3aR1 was also lower in female subcutaneous adipose tissue than in males. Collectively, these results reveal sexual dimorphism in the adipsin/C3a/C3aR1 axis in regulating adipose thermogenesis and defense against cold stress. Our findings establish a potentially new role of the alternative complement pathway in adaptive thermogenesis and highlight sex-specific considerations in potential therapeutic targets for metabolic diseases.




