Abstract
Aims/hypothesis
Protein-mediated trans-membrane and intracellular fatty acid trafficking are becoming increasingly recognised as biochemically and physiologically important concepts. Obesity and insulin resistance are polygenic disorders, heavily influenced by environmental and life-style factors, and are virtually always associated with disturbed fatty acid metabolism in adipose and other tissues. The aim of this study was to investigate mRNA expression levels of fatty-acid-handling proteins in adipose tissue in relation to markers of genetic and acquired obesity and insulin resistance.
Methods
We quantified mRNA expression of subcutaneous adipose tissue fatty-acid-handling proteins (ALBP, KLBP, FATP1, FATP4, CD36, ACS1) in 17 monozygotic twin-pairs with a range of intra-pair differences (Δ) in BMI and detailed measures of obesity and insulin resistance, allowing influences of genetic and non-genetic factors to be distinguished.
Results
In acquired obesity FATP4 expression was up-regulated independently of genetic background (ΔFATP4 versus ΔBMI; r=0.50, p=0.04; ΔFATP4 versus Δbody fat; r=0.59, p=0.01). Similarly, CD36 and FATP1 expression correlated with acquired differences in HDL cholesterol and non-esterified fatty acid concentrations respectively. Moreover, FATP4 and CD36 expression levels correlated with measures of obesity and insulin resistance that are influenced by both genetic and non-genetic factors (FATP4 versus BMI: r=0.53, p=0.0001; FATP4 versus body fat: r=0.51, p=0.002; FATP4 versus homeostasis model assessment [HOMA]: r=0.49, p=0.001; CD36 versus BMI: r=0.50, p=0.02; CD36 versus body fat: r=0.63, p=0.001; CD36 versus HOMA: r=0.34, p=0.06).
Conclusions/interpretation
These findings indicate that expression of specific adipose tissue fatty-acid-handling proteins is related to obesity and insulin resistance, and that, in particular, FATP4 plays a role in acquired obesity. Our results suggest that facilitated fatty acid trafficking is a physiologically and pathologically relevant phenomenon in man.
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Introduction
Perturbations of fatty acid metabolism in adipose tissue and other tissues are implicated in the development of obesity and insulin resistance. Increased plasma NEFA concentrations, which are a hallmark of obesity and insulin resistance (reviewed in [1]), might be caused by increased adipose tissue lipolysis and NEFA secretion, increased hepatic VLDL triglyceride (TG) synthesis and secretion, and reduced peripheral NEFA uptake. The cellular uptake of long-chain NEFAs is facilitated by membrane-associated proteins, including fatty acid translocase (FAT/CD36) [2], and the fatty acid transport proteins (FATPs) [3]. The FATPs constitute a highly homologous family of proteins (FATP1–6 in man) with distinct expression patterns [4], of which FATP1 and FATP4 are believed to be the main FATPs in adipose tissue. The mechanism of protein-mediated NEFA import is not entirely known, but has been suggested to include vectorial acylation and metabolic trapping of NEFAs via the intrinsic acyl-CoA synthase (ACS) activity of the FATPs [5], possibly in concert with ACS1 activity [6]. Intracellularly, cytosolic fatty-acid-binding proteins (FABPs), which include FABP4/adipocyte lipid-binding protein (ALBP)/aP2 and FABP5/keratinocyte lipid-binding protein (KLBP)/mal1 in adipose tissue [7], are believed to sequester and direct NEFAs and their derivatives into different metabolic pathways.
Several of the above adipose tissue fatty-acid-handling proteins are subject to similar transcriptional [8, 9] and post-translational [10, 11] regulation, and some co-localise in subcellular compartments [6, 12], facts which suggest that fatty-acid-handling protein activity is coordinated. Transcriptional regulators of fatty-acid-handling proteins include molecular entities that are modulated in obesity and insulin resistance, e.g. potential peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-ligands [8, 13], insulin [14], native and oxidised lipoproteins [15], as well as inflammatory mediators and cytokines [16]. Interestingly, insulin down-regulates adipocyte FATP1 mRNA levels [14] but induces translocation of FATP1 from intracellular pools to the plasma membrane [11], possibly up-regulating protein activity in ways reminiscent of CD36 [10] and GLUT4 [17] translocation in response to insulin. The importance of protein-mediated trans-membrane and intracellular fatty acid transport for lipid and carbohydrate homeostasis has been demonstrated in animal models and by in vitro studies [18, 19, 20, 21]. Fatty-acid-handling protein expression in human tissues in relation to obesity and insulin resistance is poorly investigated, and further studies are clearly warranted. Previous studies of human adipose tissue have shown ALBP and KLBP expression to be increased after weight loss in obese subjects and CD36 expression to be decreased [22]. Moreover, lipodystrophy (which is strongly related to insulin resistance) in HIV-positive patients undergoing highly active anti-retroviral therapy was associated with reduced adipose tissue ACS1 expression [23]. In addition, FATP1 mRNA levels in skeletal muscle were negatively correlated with BMI in middle-aged women (but not in men), whereas no such correlation was observed for adipose tissue FATP1 expression, which was analysed in men only [24]. To our knowledge, no studies have shown that FATP4 expression is related to measures of human obesity or insulin resistance.
In general, cross-sectional studies of human disease markers rarely permit unequivocal distinction between genetic versus environmental and life-style effects on the investigated variables. In order to enable such distinctions, the study of monozygotic (MZ) twins discordant for markers of disease is clearly advantageous [25]. In the current study, 17 MZ twin-pairs were recruited specifically because they exhibited a range of intra-pair differences in BMI. Recruitment followed screening of 658 MZ twin-pairs in the FinnTwin16 cohort, for the purpose of investigating the expression of fatty-acid-handling proteins in adipose tissue in relation to obesity and insulin resistance, allowing the possibility to distinguish between influences of genetic and non-genetic factors on the studied parameters.
Subjects and methods
Subjects
In order to investigate fatty-acid-handling protein gene expression in adipose tissue in relation to measures of obesity and insulin resistance, with or without the influence of genetic background, MZ twin-pairs with a range of intra-pair differences in BMI were recruited to the study. The study participants were recruited from FinnTwin16, a population-based, longitudinal study including virtually all Finnish twins born between 1975 and 1979 and identified in the Finnish national population registry [26]. Questionnaires were initially sent to 16-year-old twins, resulting in 5661 responses. The response rates were 88% and 93% for boys and girls respectively. All respondent twins were surveyed again at 17 and 18.5 years of age, and as young adults.
Based on responses to the last follow-up questionnaires between 2000 and 2002, twin-pairs were recruited to the current study. After screening of all MZ twin-pairs (n=658), 14 pairs with a BMI difference of at least 4 kg/m2 were identified. Ten such pairs with discordant BMI values participated in the clinical studies. In addition, nine MZ pairs who were seemingly concordant for BMI were studied. Analyses of mRNA expression in subcutaneous fat were performed for nine discordant and eight concordant (four overweight, four with normal weight) MZ twin-pairs.
All participants gave their informed consent to participate in the study. All were considered healthy (except for obesity) and were not taking medication (except contraceptives) and were also not pregnant, these assessments being based on clinical examination by a physician and a structured psychiatric interview for major psychiatric disorders including depression, eating disorders and substance abuse. The study was approved by the Finnish and Swedish local ethics committees.
Study design
All patients were studied after an overnight fast. Blood samples were taken for measurement of plasma glucose concentrations by the glucose oxidase method using a Beckman Glucose Analyser II (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, Calif., USA) and serum TG, total and HDL cholesterol concentrations with the respective enzymatic kits (Roche Diagnostics, Branchburg, N.J., USA). LDL cholesterol concentrations were calculated using the Friedewald formula. Whole-body insulin sensitivity (M-value) was assessed with a euglycaemic–hyperinsulinaemic clamp procedure, with measurements of base-line serum insulin (Phadeseph Insulin RIA, Pharmacia and Upjohn Diagnostics, Uppsala, Sweden) and NEFA concentrations (analysed at 0, 30, 60, 90 and 120 minutes) by a fluorometric method [27]. Body fat was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry as described [28]. Subcutaneous and intra-abdominal fat was measured by magnetic resonance imaging of 16 transaxial scans reaching from 8 cm above to 8 cm below the fourth and fifth lumbar interspace as described [23].
Analysis of mRNA expression
Subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue biopsies taken by needle aspiration under local anaesthesia were homogenised in 2 ml RNA STAT-60 (Tel-Test, Friendswood, Tex., USA) and total RNA was isolated as described [23]. For cDNA synthesis we used 100 ng total RNA with M-MLV reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies, Paisley, UK). We quantified mRNA expression of specific fatty-acid-handling proteins (ALBP, KLBP, FATP1, FATP4, CD36, ACS1) by real-time PCR using the ABI Prism 7000 Sequence Detection System and software (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif., USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol and employing five-point standard curves generated from ten-fold dilutions of purified PCR-products. Primer and probe sets for ALBP, KLBP, FATP1, FATP4 and ACS1 were designed using the manufacturer’s software and sequences deposited in GenBank (NM001442, NM001444, AX015323, AF055899 and L09229 respectively) [23]. CD36 and TATA-box binding protein (TBP) were measured with pre-developed assays-on-demand (Hs00169627_m1 and Hs00427620_m1 respectively; Applied Biosystems). Results were expressed as arbitrary units related to levels of TBP mRNA expression for normalisation.
Statistical analysis
Intra-pair differences between leaner and heavier co-twins were analysed by paired non-parametric Wilcoxon tests. In twin individuals, Pearson correlations were computed to describe the associations between the variables. The statistical significance of the association was derived from regression analyses, with correction for co-twin clustering compensating for within-pair relationships of observations. Because the twin subjects are clustered in pairs rather than derived from true population individuals, the error terms, confidence intervals and p values would be biased were this clustering ignored. Skewed variables were logarithmically transformed prior to individual correlation analysis. Spearman rank correlations were used for intra-pair analyses. The analyses were conducted with the Stata software (release 8.0; Stata, College Station, Tex., USA) or the Statview software (SAS Institute, Cary, N.C., USA). The homeostasis model assessment (HOMA) index was calculated as the product of fasting insulin and glucose concentrations divided by 22.5. A p value of 0.05 or less was deemed statistically significant.
Results
The mean age of the study participants was 25.7 years (23.8–27.4 years). Eight pairs were women and nine pairs were men. Physical and biochemical characteristics and subcutaneous adipose tissue gene expression levels of the study participants are presented in Table 1. In accordance with the selection procedure, both the discordant and the concordant groups showed intra-pair differences in BMI of a similar statistical significance (p=0.008 and p=0.01 respectively), but different numerical magnitude. Consistently, in the discordant group, body fat, subcutaneous fat, intra-abdominal fat, M-value, and insulin, glucose and HDL cholesterol concentrations were also significantly different between heavier and leaner twins, whereas in the concordant group no such differences in other anthropometric or biochemical variables were observed. However, FATP1 expression levels were significantly different between heavier and leaner twins in the concordant group (p=0.05). Control TBP mRNA expression levels were not significantly correlated with BMI in either individual (r=−0.18, p=0.40, n=34 with correction for co-twin clustering) or intra-pair analyses (r=−0.07, p=0.79, n=17).
In individual correlation analysis (Table 2), influenced by genetic, environmental and life-style factors, FATP4 and CD36 expression levels in subcutaneous adipose tissue were found to be positively correlated with BMI, body fat and subcutaneous fat (Fig. 1, 2). FATP4 and KLBP expression levels were positively correlated with intra-abdominal fat. FATP4 expression correlated positively with insulin concentrations and the HOMA index. CD36 expression also correlated with insulin concentrations, and (border-line significance) with the HOMA index and M-value. Furthermore, FATP4 and CD36 expression levels were positively correlated with total and LDL cholesterol concentrations, and KLBP expression with TG concentrations. FATP1 expression had a positive correlation with HDL cholesterol (border-line significance). ACS1 was negatively correlated and FATP1 expression was positively correlated (border-line significance) with base-line (fasting) NEFA concentrations before a hyperinsulinaemic–euglycaemic clamp. However, after 30 and 60 min of the clamp respectively, the correlations of ACS1 and FATP1 expression with NEFA concentrations were no longer significant. Given the similar observations above with regard to FATP4 and CD36 expression, the correlation between the expression levels of these genes was investigated and found to be highly significant (r=0.66, p=0.0001).
In the analysis of intra-pair differences (Table 3), independent of genetic factors, FATP4 expression levels were positively correlated with measures of adiposity (BMI, body fat, subcutaneous fat and intra-abdominal fat; Fig. 1), whereas CD36 expression levels were not (Fig. 2). CD36 expression was positively correlated with HDL cholesterol concentrations. FATP1 and ALBP expression (the latter with border-line significance) were positively correlated with NEFA concentrations. KLBP expression levels were negatively correlated with TG and total cholesterol concentrations (border-line significance). In contrast to the individual correlation analysis, no significant correlation between intra-pair differences in FATP4 and CD36 expression levels was observed.
Discussion
The current study was designed to allow the investigation of subcutaneous adipose tissue gene expression in relation to obesity and insulin resistance, with or without the influence of the genetic background. To this end, MZ twins exhibiting a range of within-pair differences in detailed and extensive measures of obesity, fat distribution and insulin resistance were recruited to the study. Two modes of statistical evaluation were implemented: (i) individual correlation analyses corrected for co-twin clustering to investigate gene expression in relation to obesity and insulin resistance caused by genetic and non-genetic factors; and most importantly (ii) intra-pair analyses to investigate gene expression in relation to acquired obesity and insulin resistance, independent of genetic factors.
Expression levels of several fatty-acid-handling proteins were related to markers of obesity and insulin resistance caused by the combined effects of genes, environment and life-style, according to the individual analysis. FATP4 and CD36 expression levels were positively correlated with measures of obesity (BMI, body fat, subcutaneous and intra-abdominal fat), and consistently also with insulin concentrations and the HOMA index. This is consistent with observations that up-regulation of adipocyte fatty acid transporter mRNA levels and fatty acid uptake occur early in rat models of genetic obesity [29]. Also, adipose-tissue-derived giant vesicles (in which fatty acid uptake is divorced from cellular fatty acid metabolism) from obese rats exhibited higher fatty acid transporter expression and fatty acid uptake than vesicles from lean littermates [30]. However, in manifest human obesity and insulin resistance, adipose tissue fatty acid uptake and buffering are impaired [1]. The idea that FATP4 plays a role in the development of human obesity and insulin resistance is supported by the association of the FATP4 Gly209Ser polymorphism with variations in BMI, insulin concentrations and HOMA index in healthy middle-aged men [31]. In addition, both FATP4 and CD36 expression correlated positively in the present study, with total and LDL cholesterol concentrations. It has been suggested that CD36, being a lipoprotein scavenger receptor, plays a role in cholesterol metabolism [32]. FATP4, on the other hand, has to date not been directly implicated in cholesterol metabolism.
KLBP expression correlated with intra-abdominal fat volume and TG concentrations. In mice, KLBP deficiency was associated with reduced subcutaneous fat mass and TG concentrations [33], which seems consistent with the current findings. In this study, no significant correlations were observed regarding expression levels of ALBP, the major FABP in adipose tissue. This possibly suggests that KLBP expression is more stringently regulated than ALBP by the parameters investigated in this study. Such differences in the regulation of ALBP and KLBP expression might explain the differences in the ALBP : KLBP ratio observed in lean versus obese subjects [22] and in subcutaneous versus intra-abdominal fat depots [34].
Both ACS1 and FATP1 (as well as CD36 and FATP4) promote NEFA uptake and/or acyl-CoA formation [5, 6], thereby possibly counteracting adipose tissue lipolytic NEFA secretion. Consistently in the present study, ACS1 expression correlated negatively with fasting NEFA concentrations. The trend towards a positive correlation between FATP1 expression and fasting NEFA concentrations could result from high FATP1 expression being a consequence rather than a cause of the high NEFA concentrations.
Analysis of gene expression related to acquired obesity and insulin resistance independent of genetic background showed that FATP4 expression was up-regulated in acquired obesity, arguing that the influence of environmental and life-style factors on FATP4 expression are important for the development of obesity. FATP4 might thus be an attractive target for pharmaceutical prevention or treatment of obesity. In contrast, no significant (numerically almost zero) correlations between acquired obesity and CD36 expression were observed, suggesting that the correlations between CD36 expression and obesity in the individual analysis were due mainly to genetic factors. In the individual analysis, the expression levels of FATP4 and CD36 correlated strongly, which could indicate that these gene products share some regulatory properties. However, no such correlation was observed in the analysis of intra-pair differences, suggesting qualitative and/or quantitative differences in transcriptional regulation of FATP4 and CD36 by obesity-related environmental factors. Furthermore, the current data suggest that in acquired obesity, CD36 and FATP1 expression are related to HDL cholesterol and NEFA concentrations respectively.
The current study design is particularly valuable because it permits the identification of parameters related to acquired obesity and insulin resistance. However, it should be noted that this study only identifies specific subcutaneous adipose tissue gene expression related to the development of obesity and insulin resistance, without characterising causal relationships. Moreover, the mRNA data may not accurately reflect protein levels or protein activity, especially as this activity could be dependent on sub-cellular protein localisation. However, commercially available antibodies have not allowed us unambiguous quantification of adipose tissue fatty-acid-handling protein expression (e.g. FATP4) by western blot analysis. In addition, several of the investigated fatty-acid-handling proteins exhibit tissue-specific expression patterns (e.g. FATPs and FABPs), and this may reflect physiological differences in fatty acid handling between different tissues at a given nutritional state (for example, adipose tissue TG hydrolysis and hepatic TG synthesis occurring concomitantly in the fasting state). The current observations in subcutaneous adipose tissue should not therefore be extrapolated to other tissues. Instead, further studies are necessary to elucidate the physiological role(s) of fatty-acid-handling proteins in different tissues.
In summary, we have provided evidence that expression levels of specific fatty-acid-handling proteins in subcutaneous adipose tissue are related to measures of genetic and acquired obesity and insulin resistance in young people. In particular, we found in individual correlation analyses that FATP4 and CD36 are related to measures of obesity and insulin resistance, while intra-pair correlations revealed that FATP4 expression was significantly up-regulated in acquired obesity. These findings further suggest that facilitated fatty acid transport in subcutaneous adipose tissue is a concept of physiological and pathological relevance in man.
Abbreviations
- ACS:
-
acyl-CoA synthase
- ALBP:
-
adipocyte lipid-binding protein
- FABP:
-
fatty-acid-binding protein
- FATP:
-
fatty acid transport protein
- HOMA:
-
homeostasis model assessment
- KLBP:
-
keratinocyte lipid-binding protein
- MZ:
-
monozygotic
- TBP:
-
TATA-box binding protein
- TG:
-
triglyceride
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Swedish Medical Research Council (project 8691), the Torsten and Ragnar Söderberg Foundation, the Swedish Heart-Lung Foundation, the Swedish Institute, the Swedish National Network and Graduate School for Cardiovascular Research, the Professor Nanna Svartz Foundation, the Åke Wiberg Foundation, the Nilsson-Ehle Foundation, the Fredrik and Ingrid Thuring Foundation, the Gamla Tjänarinnor Foundation, the Swedish Society of Medicine, the Academy of Finland (44069, 201461), the USPHS National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (AA08315, AA12502), the European Union Fifth Framework Program (QLRT-1999-00916, QLG2-CT-2002-01254), Helsinki University Central Hospital grants, the Finnish Medical Association, the Finnish Cultural Foundation, the Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation and the Ahokas Foundation. The authors wish to thank Erjastiina Heikkinen, Katja Tuominen and Maarit Toivonen for excellent assistance. They also thank all volunteers. K. Gertow and K. H. Pietiläinen contributed equally to this work.
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Gertow, K., Pietiläinen, K.H., Yki-Järvinen, H. et al. Expression of fatty-acid-handling proteins in human adipose tissue in relation to obesity and insulin resistance. Diabetologia 47, 1118–1125 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-004-1417-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-004-1417-4