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Publication : Pleiotrophin deletion alters glucose homeostasis, energy metabolism and brown fat thermogenic function in mice.

First Author  Sevillano J Year  2019
Journal  Diabetologia Volume  62
Issue  1 Pages  123-135
PubMed ID  30327824 Mgi Jnum  J:273048
Mgi Id  MGI:6284683 Doi  10.1007/s00125-018-4746-4
Citation  Sevillano J, et al. (2019) Pleiotrophin deletion alters glucose homeostasis, energy metabolism and brown fat thermogenic function in mice. Diabetologia 62(1):123-135
abstractText  AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Pleiotrophin, a developmentally regulated and highly conserved cytokine, exerts different functions including regulation of cell growth and survival. Here, we hypothesise that this cytokine can play a regulatory role in glucose and lipid homeostasis. METHODS: To test this hypothesis, we performed a longitudinal study characterising the metabolic profile (circulating variables and tissue mRNA expression) of gene-targeted Ptn-deficient female mice and their corresponding wild-type counterparts at different ages from young adulthood (3 months) to older age (15 months). Metabolic cages were used to investigate the respiratory exchange ratio and energy expenditure, at both 24 degrees C and 30 degrees C. Undifferentiated immortalised mouse brown adipocytes (mBAs) were treated with 0.1 mug/ml pleiotrophin until day 6 of differentiation, and markers of mBA differentiation were analysed by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). RESULTS: Ptn deletion was associated with a reduction in total body fat (20.2% in Ptn(+/+) vs 13.9% in Ptn(-/-) mice) and an enhanced lipolytic response to isoprenaline in isolated adipocytes from 15-month-old mice (189% in Ptn(+/+) vs 273% in Ptn(-/-) mice). We found that Ptn(-/-) mice exhibited a significantly lower QUICKI value and an altered lipid profile; plasma triacylglycerols and NEFA did not increase with age, as happens in Ptn(+/+) mice. Furthermore, the contribution of cold-induced thermogenesis to energy expenditure was greater in Ptn(-/-) than Ptn(+/+) mice (42.6% and 33.6%, respectively). Body temperature and the activity and expression of deiodinase, T3 and mitochondrial uncoupling protein-1 in the brown adipose tissue of Ptn(-/-) mice were higher than in wild-type controls. Finally, supplementing brown pre-adipocytes with pleiotrophin decreased the expression of the brown adipocyte markers Cidea (20% reduction), Prdm16 (21% reduction), and Pgc1-alpha (also known as Ppargc1a, 11% reduction). CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Our results reveal for the first time that pleiotrophin is a key player in preserving insulin sensitivity, driving the dynamics of adipose tissue lipid turnover and plasticity, and regulating energy metabolism and thermogenesis. These findings open therapeutic avenues for the treatment of metabolic disorders by targeting pleiotrophin in the crosstalk between white and brown adipose tissue.
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