Publication: Accelerated phosphatidylcholine turnover in macrophages promotes adipose tissue inflammation in obesity.
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Identifiers
Date
2019-08-16
Authors
Petkevicius, Kasparas
Virtue, Sam
Bidault, Guillaume
Jenkins, Benjamin
Çubuk, Cankut
Morgantini, Cecilia
Aouadi, Myriam
Dopazo, Joaquin
Serlie, Mireille J
Koulman, Albert
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
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Abstract
White adipose tissue (WAT) inflammation contributes to the development of insulin resistance in obesity. While the role of adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) pro-inflammatory signalling in the development of insulin resistance has been established, it is less clear how WAT inflammation is initiated. Here, we show that ATMs isolated from obese mice and humans exhibit markers of increased rate of de novo phosphatidylcholine (PC) biosynthesis. Macrophage-specific knockout of phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase A (CCTα), the rate-limiting enzyme of de novo PC biosynthesis pathway, alleviated obesity-induced WAT inflammation and insulin resistance. Mechanistically, CCTα-deficient macrophages showed reduced ER stress and inflammation in response to palmitate. Surprisingly, this was not due to lower exogenous palmitate incorporation into cellular PCs. Instead, CCTα-null macrophages had lower membrane PC turnover, leading to elevated membrane polyunsaturated fatty acid levels that negated the pro-inflammatory effects of palmitate. Our results reveal a causal link between obesity-associated increase in de novo PC synthesis, accelerated PC turnover and pro-inflammatory activation of ATMs.
Description
MeSH Terms
Adipose Tissue
Animals
Choline-Phosphate Cytidylyltransferase
Disease Models, Animal
Gene Deletion
Humans
Inflammation
Insulin Resistance
Macrophages
Mice, Obese
Obesity
Phosphatidylcholines
Animals
Choline-Phosphate Cytidylyltransferase
Disease Models, Animal
Gene Deletion
Humans
Inflammation
Insulin Resistance
Macrophages
Mice, Obese
Obesity
Phosphatidylcholines
DeCS Terms
CIE Terms
Keywords
ER stress, adipose tissue, cell biology, fatty acid, human, human biology, immunometabolism, macrophage, medicine, membrane lipid, mouse