High local concentrations and effects on differentiation implicate interleukin-6 as a paracrine regulator

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Abstract

Objective: To examine the possibility that interleukin-6 (IL-6) can act as a paracrine regulator in adipose tissue by examining effects on adipogenic genes and measuring interstitial IL-6 concentrations in situ. Research Methods and Procedures: Circulating and interstitial IL-6 concentrations in abdominal and femoral adipose tissue were measured using the calibrated microdialysis technique in 20 healthy male subjects. The effects of adipose cell enlargement on gene expression and IL-6 secretion were examined, as well as the effect of IL-6 in vitro on gene expression of adiponectin and other markers of adipocyte differentiation. Results: The IL-6 concentration in the interstitial fluid was ∼100-fold higher than that in plasma, suggesting that IL-6 may be a paracrine regulator of adipose tissue. This was further supported by the finding that adding IL-6 in vitro at similar concentrations down-regulated the expression of adiponectin, aP2, and PPARγ-2 in cultured human adipose tissue. In addition, gene expression and release of IL-6, both in vivo and in vitro, correlated with adipose cell size. Discussion: These data suggest that IL-6 may be a paracrine regulator of adipose tissue. Furthermore, increased adipose tissue production of IL-6 after hypertrophic enlargement of the adipose cells may detrimentally affect systemic insulin action by inducing adipose tissue dysfunction with impaired differentiation of the pre-adipocytes and/or adipocytes and lower adiponectin. Copyright © 2004 NAASO.

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Sopasakis, V. R., Sandqvist, M., Gustafson, B., Hammarstedt, A., Schmelz, M., Yang, X., … Smith, U. (2004). High local concentrations and effects on differentiation implicate interleukin-6 as a paracrine regulator. Obesity Research, 12(3), 454–460. https://doi.org/10.1038/oby.2004.51

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