Melatonin induces fat browning by transdifferentiation of white adipocytes and de novo differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Salagre Simón, Diego; Chayah Ghaddab, Meriem; Molina Carballo, Antonio; Muñoz Hoyos, Antonio; Navarro Alarcón, Miguel; Agil Abdalla, Mhmad AhmadEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Date
2022-03-01Referencia bibliográfica
Food Funct., 2022,13, 3760-3775. DOI: [10.1039/d1fo04360a]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government SAF2016-79794R; European Commission B-CTS-102-UGR20; University of GranadaRésumé
The role of melatonin in obesity control is extensively accepted, but its mechanism of action is still
unclear. Previously we demonstrated that chronic oral melatonin acts as a brown-fat inducer, driving subcutaneous
white adipose tissue (sWAT) into a brown-fat-like function (beige) in obese diabetic rats.
However, immunofluorescence characterization of beige depots in sWAT and whether melatonin is a
beige-fat inducer by de novo differentiation and/or transdifferentiation of white adipocytes are still
undefined. Lean (ZL) and diabetic fatty (ZDF) Zücker rats were subdivided into two groups, control (C) and
oral melatonin-supplemented (M, 10 mg kg−1 day−1) for 6 weeks. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) were
isolated from both rat inguinal fat and human lipoaspirates followed by adipogenesis assays with or
without melatonin (50 nM for 12 h in a 24 h period, 12 h+/12 h−) mimicking the light/dark cycle.
Immunofluorescence and western-blot assays showed the partial transdifferentiation of white adipocytes
in both ZL and ZDF rats, with increasing thermogenic and beige markers, UCP1 and CITED1 and decreasing
white adipocyte marker ASC-1 expression. In addition, melatonin increased UCP1, CITED1, and PGC1-
α expression in differentiated adipocytes in both rats and humans. These results demonstrate that melatonin
increases brown fat in obese diabetic rats by both adipocyte transdifferentiation and de novo differentiation.
Furthermore, it promotes beige MSC adipogenesis in humans. This may contribute to the control
of body weight attributed to melatonin and its metabolic benefits in human diabesity.