Insulin regulates lipolysis and fat mass by upregulating growth/differentiation factor 3 in adipose tissue macrophages

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Abstract

Previous genetic studies in mice have shown that functional loss of activin receptor-like kinase 7 (ALK7), a type I transforming growth factor-b receptor, increases lipolysis to resist fat accumulation in adipocytes. Although growth/differentiation factor 3 (GDF3) has been suggested to function as a ligand of ALK7 under nutrient-excess conditions, it is unknown how GDF3 production is regulated. Here, we show that a physiologically low level of insulin converts CD11c2 adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) into GDF3-producing CD11c+ macrophages ex vivo and directs ALK7-dependent accumulation of fat in vivo. Depletion of ATMs by clodronate upregulates adipose lipases and reduces fat mass in ALK7-intact obese mice, but not in their ALK7-deficient counterparts. Furthermore, depletion of ATMs or transplantation of GDF3-deficient bone marrow negates the in vivo effects of insulin on both lipolysis and fat accumulation in ALK7-intact mice. The GDF3-ALK7 axis between ATMs and adipocytes represents a previously unrecognized mechanism by which insulin regulates both fat metabolism and mass.

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Bu, Y., Okunishi, K., Yogosawa, S., Mizuno, K., Irudayam, M. J., Brown, C. W., & Izumi, T. (2018). Insulin regulates lipolysis and fat mass by upregulating growth/differentiation factor 3 in adipose tissue macrophages. Diabetes, 67(9), 1761–1772. https://doi.org/10.2337/db17-1201

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