Diabetic human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells fail to differentiate in functional adipocytes

Author:

Barbagallo Ignazio1,Li Volti Giovanni2,Galvano Fabio2,Tettamanti Guido3,Pluchinotta Francesca R3,Bergante Sonia3,Vanella Luca1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Drug Sciences, University of Catania, Catania 95125, Italy

2. Department of Biomedical and Biotechnological Sciences, University of Catania, Catania 95125, Italy

3. IRCCS “S. Donato” Hospital, San Donato Milanese, Milan 20097, Italy

Abstract

Adipose tissue dysfunction represents a hallmark of diabetic patients and is a consequence of the altered homeostasis of this tissue. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and their differentiation into adipocytes contribute significantly in maintaining the mass and function of adult adipose tissue. The aim of this study was to evaluate the differentiation of MSCs from patients suffering type 2 diabetes (dASC) and how such process results in hyperplasia or rather a stop of adipocyte turnover resulting in hypertrophy of mature adipocytes. Our results showed that gene profile of all adipogenic markers is not expressed in diabetic cells after differentiation indicating that diabetic cells fail to differentiate into adipocytes. Interestingly, delta like 1, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha, and interleukin 1β were upregulated whereas Sirtuin 1 and insulin receptor substrate 1 gene expression were found downregulated in dASC compared to cells obtained from healthy subjects. Taken together our data indicate that dASC lose their ability to differentiate into mature and functional adipocytes. In conclusion, our in vitro study is the first to suggest that diabetic patients might develop obesity through a hypertrophy of existing mature adipocytes due to failure turnover of adipose tissue. Impact statement In the present manuscript, we evaluated the differentiative potential of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in adipocytes obtained from healthy and diabetic patients. This finding could be of great potential interest for the field of obesity in order to exploit such results to further understand the pathophysiological processes underlying metabolic syndrome. In particular, inflammation in diabetic patients causes a dysfunction in MSCs differentiation and a decrease in adipocytes turnover leading to insulin resistance.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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