4.7 Article

Dietary Quercetin Attenuates Adipose Tissue Expansion and Inflammation and Alters Adipocyte Morphology in a Tissue-Specific Manner

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms19030895

Keywords

quercetin; inflammation; browning; mulilocular adipocyte; red onion extract; botanical extract; adipose tissue; adipocyte; adipokine

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine [5P50-AT002776-09]
  2. National Institutes of Health Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence [8P20-GM103528-07]
  3. National Institutes of Health National Obesity Research Centers [5P30-DK072476-07]

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Chronic inflammation in adipose tissue may contribute to depot-specific adipose tissue expansion, leading to obesity and insulin resistance. Dietary supplementation with quercetin or botanical extracts containing quercetin attenuates high fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity and insulin resistance and decreases inflammation. Here, we determined the effects of quercetin and red onion extract (ROE) containing quercetin on subcutaneous (inguinal, IWAT) vs. visceral (epididymal, EWAT) white adipose tissue morphology and inflammation in mice fed low fat, high fat, high fat plus 50 pg/day quercetin or high fat plus ROE containing 50 pg/day quercetin equivalents for 9 weeks. Quercetin and ROE similarly ameliorated HFD-induced increases in adipocyte size and decreases in adipocyte number in IWAT and EWAT. Furthermore, quercetin and ROE induced alterations in adipocyte morphology in IWAT. Quercetin and ROE similarly decreased HFD-induced IWAT inflammation. However, quercetin and red onion differentially affected HFD-induced EWAT inflammation, with quercetin decreasing and REO increasing inflammatory marker gene expression. Quercetin and REO also differentially regulated circulating adipokine levels. These results show that quercetin or botanical extracts containing quercetin induce white adipose tissue remodeling which may occur through inflammatory-related mechanisms.

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