TY - JOUR
T1 - Overexpression of the adiponectin gene mimics the metabolic and stress resistance effects of calorie restriction, but not the anti-tumor effect
AU - Kamohara, Ryotaro
AU - Yamaza, Haruyoshi
AU - Tsuchiya, Tomoshi
AU - Komatsu, Toshimitsu
AU - Park, Seongjoon
AU - Hayashi, Hiroko
AU - Chiba, Takuya
AU - Mori, Ryoichi
AU - Otabe, Shuichi
AU - Yamada, Kentaro
AU - Nagayasu, Takeshi
AU - Shimokawa, Isao
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Professor Masanori Kitamura at University of Yamanashi for providing ESTRAP mice. We also thank the staff at the Laboratory Animal Center for Biomedical Research at the Center for Frontier Life Sciences, Nagasaki University for their animal care and technical assistance, and Yutaka Araki, Yuko Moriyama, Rieko Tahara, and Chika Matsumoto for their excellent technical assistance. The study was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (I.S., nos. 19590227 ) and the JSPS Asian CORE Program (I.S., nos. FY2010-5 ).
PY - 2015/4/1
Y1 - 2015/4/1
N2 - Adiponectin (Adipoq), a peptide hormone secreted from the white adipose tissue, may play a role in the anti-aging and/or anti-tumor effects of calorie restriction (CR). We analyzed metabolic traits in Adipoq gene-overexpressing mice fed ad libitum with a regular diet (RD) or a high-fat diet (HFD), or fed 30% CR of RD initiated at 12. weeks of age. Adipoq-RD and -HFD mice at 6. months of age showed reduced blood glucose and insulin concentrations, and thus increased insulin sensitivity, compared with WT mice fed a RD or a HFD. In the epididymal white adipose tissue in Adipoq mice, senescence-like changes such as upregulation of p53 protein and of biomarkers of inflammation, Cd68 and Ccl2 mRNA, were ameliorated compared with WT-RD and WT-HFD mouse tissues. Resistance to stress induced by lipopolysaccharide was also strengthened in Adipoq mice compared with WT mice. These metabolic changes and stress resistance were also noted in the WT-CR mice, suggesting that Adipoq plays a part in the effect of CR. In contrast, in an allograft tumor growth model, tumor growth was not inhibited in Adipoq mice. The present findings suggest that Adipoq plays a part in the anti-aging, but not in the anti-tumor, effects of CR.
AB - Adiponectin (Adipoq), a peptide hormone secreted from the white adipose tissue, may play a role in the anti-aging and/or anti-tumor effects of calorie restriction (CR). We analyzed metabolic traits in Adipoq gene-overexpressing mice fed ad libitum with a regular diet (RD) or a high-fat diet (HFD), or fed 30% CR of RD initiated at 12. weeks of age. Adipoq-RD and -HFD mice at 6. months of age showed reduced blood glucose and insulin concentrations, and thus increased insulin sensitivity, compared with WT mice fed a RD or a HFD. In the epididymal white adipose tissue in Adipoq mice, senescence-like changes such as upregulation of p53 protein and of biomarkers of inflammation, Cd68 and Ccl2 mRNA, were ameliorated compared with WT-RD and WT-HFD mouse tissues. Resistance to stress induced by lipopolysaccharide was also strengthened in Adipoq mice compared with WT mice. These metabolic changes and stress resistance were also noted in the WT-CR mice, suggesting that Adipoq plays a part in the effect of CR. In contrast, in an allograft tumor growth model, tumor growth was not inhibited in Adipoq mice. The present findings suggest that Adipoq plays a part in the anti-aging, but not in the anti-tumor, effects of CR.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.exger.2015.02.011
DO - 10.1016/j.exger.2015.02.011
M3 - Article
C2 - 25698374
AN - SCOPUS:84923192969
SN - 0531-5565
VL - 64
SP - 46
EP - 54
JO - Experimental Gerontology
JF - Experimental Gerontology
ER -