
AbstractBrown and beige adipocytes recruitment in brown (BAT) or white adipose tissue, mainly in the inguinal fat pad (iWAT), meet the need for temperature adaptation in cold-exposure conditions and protect against obesity in face of hypercaloric diets. Using interleukin18 (Il18) and Il18 receptor 1- knockout (Il18r1-KO) mice, this study aimed to investigate the role of IL18 signaling in BAT and iWAT activation and thermogenesis under both stimuli. Il18-KO, extremely dietary obesity-prone as previously described, failed to develop diet-induced thermogenesis as assessed by BAT and iWAT Ucp1 mRNA levels. Overweight when fed standard chow but not HFD, HFD-fed Il18r1-KO mice exhibited increased iWAT Ucp1 gene expression. Energy expenditure was reduced in pre-obese Il18r1-KO mice and restored upon HFD-challenge. Cold exposure lead to similar results; Il18r1-KO mice were protected against acute body temperature drop, displaying a more brown-like structure, alternative macrophage activation and thermogenic gene expression in iWAT than WT controls. Opposite effects were observed in Il18-KO mice. Thus, Il18 and Il18r1 genetic ablation disparate effects on energy homeostasis are likely mediated by divergent BAT responses to thermogenic stimuli as well as iWAT browning. These results suggest that a more complex receptor-signaling system mediates the IL18 adipose-tissue specific effects in energy expenditure.
Mice, Knockout, Receptors, Interleukin-18, Interleukin-18, Subcutaneous Fat, Gene Expression, Thermogenesis, Energy metabolism, Diet, High-Fat, Article, Cold Temperature, Mice, Phenotype, Adipose Tissue, Brown, Feeding behaviour, Homeostasis, Animals, Fat metabolism, Energy Metabolism
Mice, Knockout, Receptors, Interleukin-18, Interleukin-18, Subcutaneous Fat, Gene Expression, Thermogenesis, Energy metabolism, Diet, High-Fat, Article, Cold Temperature, Mice, Phenotype, Adipose Tissue, Brown, Feeding behaviour, Homeostasis, Animals, Fat metabolism, Energy Metabolism
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