Contrasting recruitment of skin-associated adipose depots during cold challenge of mouse and human
Kasza, I; Kühn, JP; Völzke, H; Hernando, D; Xu, YG; Siebert, JW; Gibson, ALF; Yen, CLE; Nelson, DW; MacDougald, OA; Richardson, NE; Lamming, DW; Kern, PA; Alexander, CM
2022-02-01
Abstract
Key points: Several distinct strategies produce and conserve heat to maintain the body temperature of mammals, each associated with unique physiologies, with consequences for wellness and disease susceptibility Highly regulated properties of skin offset the total requirement for heat production We hypothesize that the adipose component of skin is primarily responsible for modulating heat flux; here we evaluate the relative regulation of adipose depots in mouse and human, to test their recruitment to heat production and conservation We found that insulating mouse dermal white adipose tissue accumulates in response to environmentally and genetically induced cool stress; this layer is one of two adipose depots closely apposed to mouse skin, where the subcutaneous mammary gland fat pads are actively recruited to heat production In contrast, the body-wide adipose depot associated with human skin produces heat directly, potentially creating an alternative to the centrally regulated brown adipose tissue. Abstract: Mammalian skin impacts metabolic efficiency system-wide, controlling the rate of heat loss and consequent heat production. Here we compare the unique fat depots associated with mouse and human skin, to determine whether they have corresponding functions and regulation. For humans, we assay a skin-associated fat (SAF) body-wide depot to distinguish it from the subcutaneous fat pads characteristic of the abdomen and upper limbs. We show that the thickness of SAF is not related to general adiposity; it is much thicker (1.6-fold) in women than men, and highly subject-specific. We used molecular and cellular assays of β-adrenergic-induced lipolysis and found that dermal white adipose tissue (dWAT) in mice is resistant to lipolysis; in contrast, the body-wide human SAF depot becomes lipolytic, generating heat in response to β-adrenergic stimulation. In mice challenged to make more heat to maintain body temperature (either environmentally or genetically), there is a compensatory increase in thickness of dWAT: a corresponding β-adrenergic stimulation of human skin adipose (in vivo or in explant) depletes adipocyte lipid content. We summarize the regulation of skin-associated adipocytes by age, sex and adiposity, for both species. We conclude that the body-wide dWAT depot of mice shows unique regulation that enables it to be deployed for heat preservation; combined with the actively lipolytic subcutaneous mammary fat pads they enable thermal defence. The adipose tissue that covers human subjects produces heat directly, providing an alternative to the brown adipose tissues.Publisher
Wiley
ISSN
0022-3751 1469-7793
Deep Blue DOI
Other DOIs
PMID
33724479
Subjects
UCP1 brown adipose tissue dWAT dermal white adipose tissue heat production lipolysis obesity scWAT skin-associated fat subcutaneous white adipose tissue thermogenesis β-adrenergic response Adipose Tissue, Brown Adipose Tissue, White Animals Female Humans Lipolysis Subcutaneous Fat Thermogenesis
Types
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Morris, David L.; Oatmen, Kelsie E.; Mergian, Taleen A.; Cho, Kae Won; DelProposto, Jennifer L.; Singer, Kanakadurga; Evans‐molina, Carmella; O’rourke, Robert W.; Lumeng, Carey N. (Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2016-06)
-
Muir, Lindsey A.; Kiridena, Samadhi; Griffin, Cameron; DelProposto, Jennifer B.; Geletka, Lynn; Martinez‐santibañez, Gabriel; Zamarron, Brian F.; Lucas, Hannah; Singer, Kanakadurga; O’ Rourke, Robert W.; Lumeng, Carey N. (Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2018-04)
-
Gao, Chuan; Langefeld, Carl D.; Ziegler, Julie T.; Taylor, Kent D.; Norris, Jill M.; Chen, Yii‐der I.; Hellwege, Jacklyn N.; Guo, Xiuqing; Allison, Matthew A.; Speliotes, Elizabeth K.; Rotter, Jerome I.; Bowden, Donald W.; Wagenknecht, Lynne E.; Palmer, Nicholette D. (Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2018-01)
Remediation of Harmful Language
The University of Michigan Library aims to describe its collections in a way that respects the people and communities who create, use, and are represented in them. We encourage you to Contact Us anonymously if you encounter harmful or problematic language in catalog records or finding aids. More information about our policies and practices is available at Remediation of Harmful Language.
Accessibility
If you are unable to use this file in its current format, please select the Contact Us link and we can modify it to make it more accessible to you.