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Publication : Skeletal glucocorticoid signalling determines leptin resistance and obesity in aging mice.

First Author  Henneicke H Year  2020
Journal  Mol Metab Volume  42
Pages  101098 PubMed ID  33045434
Mgi Jnum  J:305764 Mgi Id  MGI:6705883
Doi  10.1016/j.molmet.2020.101098 Citation  Henneicke H, et al. (2020) Skeletal glucocorticoid signalling determines leptin resistance and obesity in aging mice. Mol Metab 42:101098
abstractText  OBJECTIVE: Aging and chronic glucocorticoid excess share a number of critical features, including the development of central obesity, insulin resistance and osteoporosis. Previous studies have shown that skeletal glucocorticoid signalling increases with aging and that osteoblasts mediate the detrimental skeletal and metabolic effects of chronic glucocorticoid excess. Here, we investigated whether endogenous glucocorticoid action in the skeleton contributes to metabolic dysfunction during normal aging. METHODS: Mice lacking glucocorticoid signalling in osteoblasts and osteocytes (HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice) and their wild-type littermates were studied until 3, 6, 12 and 18 months of age. Body composition, adipose tissue morphology, skeletal gene expression and glucose/insulin tolerance were assessed at each timepoint. Leptin sensitivity was assessed by arcuate nucleus STAT3 phosphorylation and inhibition of feeding following leptin administration. Tissue-specific glucose uptake and adipose tissue oxygen consumption rate were also measured. RESULTS: As they aged, wild-type mice became obese and insulin-resistant. In contrast, HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice remained lean and insulin-sensitive during aging. Obesity in wild-type mice was due to leptin resistance, evidenced by an impaired ability of exogenous leptin to suppress food intake and phosphorylate hypothalamic STAT3, from 6 months of age onwards. In contrast, HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice remained leptin-sensitive throughout the study. Compared to HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice, leptin-resistant wild-type mice displayed attenuated sympathetic outflow, with reduced tyrosine hydroxylase expression in both the hypothalamus and thermogenic adipose tissues. Adipose tissue oxygen consumption rate declined progressively in aging wild-type mice but was maintained in HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice. At 18 months of age, adipose tissue glucose uptake was increased 3.7-fold in HSD2(OB/OCY)-tg mice, compared to wild-type mice. CONCLUSIONS: Skeletal glucocorticoid signalling is critical for the development of leptin resistance, obesity and insulin resistance during aging. These findings underscore the skeleton's importance in the regulation of body weight and implicate osteoblastic/osteocytic glucocorticoid signalling in the aetiology of aging-related obesity and metabolic disease.
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