|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Mice with Fabp4-Cre ablation of Arid5b are resistant to diet-induced obesity and hepatic steatosis.

First Author  Whitson RH Jr Year  2021
Journal  Mol Cell Endocrinol Volume  528
Pages  111246 PubMed ID  33757861
Mgi Jnum  J:304470 Mgi Id  MGI:6690325
Doi  10.1016/j.mce.2021.111246 Citation  Whitson RH Jr, et al. (2021) Mice with Fabp4-Cre ablation of Arid5b are resistant to diet-induced obesity and hepatic steatosis. Mol Cell Endocrinol 528:111246
abstractText  Mice with global deletion of Arid5b expression are lean and resistant to diet-induced obesity, and Arid5b is required for adipogenesis in a variety of in vitro models. To determine whether the lean phenotype of Arid5b(-/-) mice can be explained by its absence in adipose tissues, we generated mice with Fabp4-mediated ablation of Arid5b. Arid5b expression was ablated in adipocytes, from Fabp4-CRE(pos); Arid5b(FLOX/FLOX) (FSKO) mice. FSKO mice were not lean when maintained on standard chow, but males were resistant to weight gains when placed on high-fat diets (HFD). This was mainly due to decreased lipid accumulation in subcutaneous (inguinal) white adipose tissue (IWAT), and the liver. Lipid accumulation proceeded normally in gonadal WAT (GWAT) and glucose intolerance developed to the same degree in FSKO and WT controls when subjected to HFD. CD68-positive macrophages were also significantly reduced in both inguinal and gonadal fat depots. RNA-Seq analysis of IWAT adipocytes from FSKO mice on HFD revealed significant decreases in the expression of genes associated with inflammation. Although Arid5b expression was normal in livers of FSKO mice, tissue weight gains and triglyceride accumulation, and expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism were markedly reduced in livers of FSKO mice on HFD. These results suggest that Arid5b plays a critical role in lipid accumulation in specific WAT depots, and in the inflammatory signaling from WAT depots to liver that lead to lipid accumulation and hepatic steatosis.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

11 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression