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Biomedical

Adipocyte-Endothelium Crosstalk in Obesity

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Rugivan Sabaratnam,

Rugivan Sabaratnam


Per Svenningsen

Per Svenningsen


  Peer Reviewed

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© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
400 Views

Added on

2024-10-25

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.681290

Related Subjects
Anatomy
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Primary care
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Abstract

Obesity is characterized by pathological adipose tissue (AT) expansion. While healthy AT expansion enhances systemic insulin sensitivity, unhealthy AT expansion through increased adipocyte size is associated with insulin resistance, fibrosis, hypoxia, and reduced adipose-derived adiponectin secretion. The mechanisms causing the unhealthy AT expansion are not fully elucidated; yet, dysregulated crosstalk between cells within the AT is an important contributor. Evidence from animal and human studies suggests a crucial role of the crosstalk between vascular endothelium (the innermost cell type in blood vessels) and adipocytes for metabolic homeostasis. Arterial endothelial cells are directly involved in maintaining normal organ functions through local blood flow regulation. The endothelial-dependent regulation of blood flow in AT is hampered in obesity, which negatively affects the adipocyte. Moreover, endothelial cells secrete extracellular vesicles (EVs) that target adipocytes in vivo. The endothelial EVs secretion is hampered in obesity and may be affected by the adipocyte-derived adipokine adiponectin. Adiponectin targets the vascular endothelium, eliciting organ-protective functions through binding to T-cadherin. The reduced obesity-induced adiponectin binding of T-cadherin reduces endothelial EV secretion. This affects endothelial health and cell-cell communication between AT cells and distant organs, influencing systemic energy homeostasis. This review focuses on the current understanding of endothelial and adipocyte crosstalk. We will discuss how obesity changes the AT environment and how these changes contribute to obesity-associated metabolic disease in humans. Particularly, we will describe and discuss the EV-dependent communication and regulation between adipocytes, adiponectin, and the endothelial cells regulating systemic energy homeostasis in health and metabolic disease in humans.

Key Questions

How does obesity affect adipocyte-endothelium interactions?

Obesity alters the adipose tissue environment, impairing endothelial health and disrupting cell-cell communication between adipose tissue cells and distant organs. This disruption influences systemic energy homeostasis and contributes to obesity-associated metabolic diseases.

What role do extracellular vesicles (EVs) play in adipocyte-endothelium crosstalk?

Endothelial cells secrete EVs that target adipocytes, facilitating communication between these cell types. In obesity, the secretion of endothelial EVs is hampered, affecting endothelial health and intercellular communication.

How does adiponectin influence endothelial function in obesity?

Adiponectin, an adipocyte-derived adipokine, targets the vascular endothelium and elicits organ-protective functions through binding to T-cadherin. In obesity, reduced adiponectin binding to T-cadherin decreases endothelial EV secretion, affecting endothelial health and intercellular communication.

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ARTICLE USAGE


Article usage: Oct-2024 to May-2025
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 May 90 90
2025 April 63 63
2025 March 59 59
2025 February 45 45
2025 January 41 41
2024 December 52 52
2024 November 36 36
2024 October 14 14
Total 400 400
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 May 90 90
2025 April 63 63
2025 March 59 59
2025 February 45 45
2025 January 41 41
2024 December 52 52
2024 November 36 36
2024 October 14 14
Total 400 400
Related Subjects
Anatomy
Biochemistry
Epidemiology
Genetics
Neuroscience
Psychology
Oncology
Medicine
Musculoskeletal science
Pediatrics
Pathology
Pharmacology
Physiology
Psychiatry
Primary care
Women and reproductive health
copyright icon

© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
400 Views

Added on

2024-10-25

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.681290

Related Subjects
Anatomy
Biochemistry
Epidemiology
Genetics
Neuroscience
Psychology
Oncology
Medicine
Musculoskeletal science
Pediatrics
Pathology
Pharmacology
Physiology
Psychiatry
Primary care
Women and reproductive health

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