Obesity causes mitochondrial fragmentation and dysfunction in white adipocytes due to RalA activation

Author:

Xia WenminORCID,Veeragandham Preethi,Cao YuORCID,Xu Yayun,Rhyne Torrey E.,Qian Jiaxin,Hung Chao-WeiORCID,Zhao PengORCID,Jones Ying,Gao HuiORCID,Liddle Christopher,Yu Ruth T.ORCID,Downes Michael,Evans Ronald M.ORCID,Rydén MikaelORCID,Wabitsch MartinORCID,Wang Zichen,Hakozaki Hiroyuki,Schöneberg Johannes,Reilly Shannon M.ORCID,Huang Jianfeng,Saltiel Alan R.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractMitochondrial dysfunction is a characteristic trait of human and rodent obesity, insulin resistance and fatty liver disease. Here we show that high-fat diet (HFD) feeding causes mitochondrial fragmentation in inguinal white adipocytes from male mice, leading to reduced oxidative capacity by a process dependent on the small GTPase RalA. RalA expression and activity are increased in white adipocytes after HFD. Targeted deletion of RalA in white adipocytes prevents fragmentation of mitochondria and diminishes HFD-induced weight gain by increasing fatty acid oxidation. Mechanistically, RalA increases fission in adipocytes by reversing the inhibitory Ser637 phosphorylation of the fission protein Drp1, leading to more mitochondrial fragmentation. Adipose tissue expression of the human homolog of Drp1, DNM1L, is positively correlated with obesity and insulin resistance. Thus, chronic activation of RalA plays a key role in repressing energy expenditure in obese adipose tissue by shifting the balance of mitochondrial dynamics toward excessive fission, contributing to weight gain and metabolic dysfunction.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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