Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9117216 | Metabolism | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The present studies examined the effect of obesity in humans on the release of transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1) by human adipose tissue. The regulation of TGF-β1 release by adipose tissue as well as the question of whether its release is due to the adipocytes or the nonfat cells in adipose tissue was also examined. There was a statistically significant (r = 0.50) correlation between the body mass index of the fat donors and the subsequent release of TGF-β1 release by subcutaneous adipose tissue. There was also a positive correlation between total TGF-β1 release by adipose tissue explants and body fat content (r = 0.69). The question of whether tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) and/or interleukin 1β (IL-1β) regulate the release of TGF-β1 was investigated by incubation of adipose tissue explants with a soluble human TNF-α receptor (etanercept) and a neutralizing antihuman IL-1β antibody. The release of TGF-β1 over 48 hours by adipose tissue explants was significantly enhanced in the presence of both the inhibitor of TNF-α and of IL-1β. It is of interest, in view of the elevated circulating insulin in blood of morbidly obese women, that the release of TGF-β1 by adipose tissue was enhanced in the presence of insulin. The question of whether the release of TGF-β1 by human adipose tissue explants was primarily due to adipocytes, as is the case for leptin, or the nonfat cells present in human adipose tissue, as is the case for IL-8 and prostaglandin E2, was examined. The release of TGF-β1 was primarily by the nonfat cells of human adipose tissue because release by adipocytes was less than 10% of that by the nonfat cells of adipose tissue.
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Authors
John N. Fain, David S. Tichansky, Atul K. Madan,