首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Preserved glucose tolerance in high-fat-fed C57BL/6 mice transplanted with PPARgamma-/-, PPARdelta-/-, PPARgammadelta-/-, or LXRalphabeta-/- bone marrow
Authors:Marathe Chaitra  Bradley Michelle N  Hong Cynthia  Chao Lily  Wilpitz Damien  Salazar Jon  Tontonoz Peter
Affiliation:Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Molecular Biology Institute and Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095
Abstract:Macrophage lipid metabolism and inflammatory responses are both regulated by the nuclear receptors PPAR and LXR. Emerging links between inflammation and metabolic disease progression suggest that PPAR and LXR signaling may alter macrophage function and thereby impact systemic metabolism. In this study, the function of macrophage PPAR and LXR in Th1-biased C57BL/6 mice was tested using a bone marrow transplantation approach with PPARgamma(-/-), PPARdelta(-/-), PPARgammadelta(-/-), and LXRalphabeta(-/-) cells. Despite their inhibitory effects on inflammatory gene expression, loss of PPARs or LXRs in macrophages did not exert major effects on obesity or glucose tolerance induced by a high-fat diet. Treatment with rosiglitazone effectively improved glucose tolerance in mice lacking macrophage PPARgamma, suggesting that cell types other than macrophages are the primary mediators of the anti-diabetic effects of PPARgamma agonists in our model system. C57BL/6 macrophages lacking PPARs or LXRs exhibited normal expression of most alternative activation gene markers, indicating that macrophage alternative activation is not absolutely dependent on these receptors in the C57BL/6 background under the conditions used here. These studies suggest that genetic background may be an important modifier of nuclear receptor effects in macrophages. Our results do not exclude a contribution of macrophage PPAR and LXR expression to systemic metabolism in certain contexts, but these factors do not appear to be dominant contributors to glucose tolerance in a high-fat-fed Th1-biased bone marrow transplant model.
Keywords:PPAR   LXR   macrophage   inflammation   insulin resistance   immune phenotype
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号