Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor g2 Controls the Rate of Adipose Tissue Lipid Storage and Determines Metabolic Flexibility

One understudied function of white adipose tissue (AT) is its role in postprandial lipid buffering. In this study, we demonstrate that mice lacking the adipose tissue-specific transcription factor peroxisome proliferator activated receptor g2 (PPARg2) exhibit a defect in their rate of adipose tissue lipid storage. Impaired adipose tissue storage rate reduces metabolic flexibility, without compromising fasted glucose tolerance or insulin sensitivity, even following prolonged high-fat feeding. However, acutely overfeeding PPARg2-KO mice caused a 10-fold increase in insulin levels compared with controls. Although impaired adipose tissue storage rate did not result in insulin resistance in young mice, 1-year-old PPARg2-KO mice developed skeletal muscle insulin resistance. Our data indicate that failed adipose tissue storage may occur prior to defects in glucose handling and that overfeeding protocols may uncover genes controlling adipose tissue storage rate, as opposed to capacity, and act as a diagnostic test for early stage human metabolic disease.

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Sam Virtue, Kasparas Petkevicius, Jose Maria Moreno-Navarrete, Benjamin Jenkins, Daniel Hart, Martin Dale, Albert Koulman, Jose Manuel Fernandez-Real, and Antonio Vidal-Puig

Cell Reports| Published August 21st, 2018 | DOI https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1721418115

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