Metabolic Dysregulation and Adipose Tissue Fibrosis: Role of Collagen VI

Author:

Khan Tayeba1,Muise Eric S.2,Iyengar Puneeth1,Wang Zhao V.3,Chandalia Manisha4,Abate Nicola4,Zhang Bei B.5,Bonaldo Paolo6,Chua Streamson7,Scherer Philipp E.38

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology

2. Departments of Molecular Profiling

3. Departments of Internal Medicine

4. Center for Human Nutrition, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390

5. Metabolic Disorders, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey 07065

6. Department of Histology, Microbiology & Medical Biotechnologies, University of Padova, Viale Giuseppe Colombo 3, I-35121 Padua, Italy

7. Department of Medicine, Diabetes Research Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461

8. Cell Biology, Touchstone Diabetes Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390-8549

Abstract

ABSTRACT Adipocytes are embedded in a unique extracellular matrix whose main function is to provide mechanical support, in addition to participating in a variety of signaling events. During adipose tissue expansion, the extracellular matrix requires remodeling to accommodate adipocyte growth. Here, we demonstrate a general upregulation of several extracellular matrix components in adipose tissue in the diabetic state, therefore implicating “adipose tissue fibrosis” as a hallmark of metabolically challenged adipocytes. Collagen VI is a highly enriched extracellular matrix component of adipose tissue. The absence of collagen VI results in the uninhibited expansion of individual adipocytes and is paradoxically associated with substantial improvements in whole-body energy homeostasis, both with high-fat diet exposure and in the ob/ob background. Collectively, our data suggest that weakening the extracellular scaffold of adipocytes enables their stress-free expansion during states of positive energy balance, which is consequently associated with an improved inflammatory profile. Therefore, the disproportionate accumulation of extracellular matrix components in adipose tissue may not be merely an epiphenomenon of metabolically challenging conditions but may also directly contribute to a failure to expand adipose tissue mass during states of excess caloric intake.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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