[HTML][HTML] Committed subcutaneous preadipocytes are reduced in human obesity

Y Tchoukalova, C Koutsari, M Jensen - Diabetologia, 2007 - Springer
Y Tchoukalova, C Koutsari, M Jensen
Diabetologia, 2007Springer
Aims/hypothesis The aim of this study was to test whether the availability of committed
preadipocytes in abdominal and femoral subcutaneous adipose tissue varies with obesity
and body fat distribution. Methods Body composition, fat cell size, committed preadipocytes
and macrophages were measured in subcutaneous abdominal and femoral adipose depots
of 17 lean, 16 upper-body-obese (UBO) and 13 lower-body-obese (LBO) women.
Preadipocytes and macrophages were identified by simultaneous staining with the …
Aims/hypothesis
The aim of this study was to test whether the availability of committed preadipocytes in abdominal and femoral subcutaneous adipose tissue varies with obesity and body fat distribution.
Methods
Body composition, fat cell size, committed preadipocytes and macrophages were measured in subcutaneous abdominal and femoral adipose depots of 17 lean, 16 upper-body-obese (UBO) and 13 lower-body-obese (LBO) women. Preadipocytes and macrophages were identified by simultaneous staining with the respective markers aP2 and CD68. In a subset of samples we measured preadipocyte proliferation, differentiation and susceptibility to apoptosis.
Results
Abdominal adipocytes were smaller in lean than in obese women. Committed preadipocytes represented a greater fraction of stromovascular cells in lean than in obese women but were similar between UBO and LBO women (abdomen: ∼30 ± 3 vs ∼17 ± 2%; thigh: ∼30 ± 3 vs ∼17 ± 2%). Preliminary data suggested that preadipocyte kinetics were similar in LBO and lean women, whereas preadipocytes of UBO women differentiated less and were more susceptible to apoptotic stimuli. The fraction of stromovascular cells that were macrophages was greater in both depots in obese women (UBO and LBO) than in normal-weight women, but the difference was not statistically significant.
Conclusions/interpretation
The proportion of subcutaneous adipose tissue stromovascular cells that are committed preadipocytes is reduced with obesity. This could be due to greater recruitment of preadipocytes to adipogenesis or greater preadipocyte apoptosis, depending upon the obesity phenotype. These data are consistent with the concept that body fat distribution may be regulated partly through differences in adipogenesis.
Springer