4.5 Article

Arsenic-Stimulated Lipolysis and Adipose Remodeling Is Mediated by G-Protein-Coupled Receptors

期刊

TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES
卷 134, 期 2, 页码 335-344

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kft108

关键词

arsenic; endothelin-1; adipose; adipocyte; G-protein-coupled receptor; lipid storage; lipolysis

资金

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health [R01ES013781, R01ES013781-S1]
  2. Pennsylvania Department of Health/Health Research Program, SAP [4100061184]
  3. Mary Anne Stock Student Research Award from the Allegheny & Eric Regional Chapter of the Society of Toxicology

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Arsenic in drinking water promotes a number of diseases that may stem from dysfunctional adipose lipid and glucose metabolism. Arsenic inhibits adipocyte differentiation and promotes insulin resistance; however, little is known of the impacts of and mechanisms for arsenic effects on adipose lipid storage and lipolysis. Based on our earlier studies of arsenic-signaling mechanisms for vascular remodeling and inhibition of adipogenesis, we investigated the hypothesis that arsenic acts through specific adipocyte G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to promote lipolysis and decrease lipid storage. We first demonstrated that 5-week exposure of mice to 100 g/l of arsenic in drinking water stimulated epididymal adipocyte hypertrophy, reduced the adipose tissue expression of perilipin (PLIN1, a lipid droplet coat protein), and increased perivascular ectopic fat deposition in skeletal muscle. Incubating adipocytes, differentiated from adipose-derived human mesenchymal stem cell, with arsenic stimulated lipolysis and decreased both Nile Red positive lipid droplets and PLIN1 expression. Arsenic-stimulated lipolysis was not associated with increased cAMP levels. However, preincubation of adipocytes with the Gi inhibitor, Pertussis toxin, attenuated As(III)-stimulated lipolysis and lipid droplet loss. Antagonizing Gi-coupled endothelin-1 type A and B receptors (EDNRA/EDNRB) also attenuated arsenic effects, but antagonizing other adipose Gi-coupled receptors that regulate fat metabolism was ineffective. The endothelin receptors have different roles in arsenic responses because only EDNRA inhibition prevented arsenic-stimulated lipolysis, but antagonists to either receptor protected lipid droplets and PLIN1 expression. These data support a role for specific GPCRs in arsenic signaling for aberrant lipid storage and metabolism that may contribute to the pathogenesis of metabolic disease caused by environmental arsenic exposures.

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