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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adiponectin, the most abundantly synthesized protein in adipose tissue, has plieotropic effects on liver, muscle, endothelium, placenta, and other tissues. We examined direct effects of recombinant porcine adiponectin on porcine ovarian granulosa cells in vitro. We demonstrate that adiponectin, at physiologically relevant levels (10-25 microg/ml), provokes expression of genes associated with periovulatory remodeling of the ovarian follicle over a time frame of 6-24 h. These include cyclooxygenase-2, prostaglandin E synthase, and vascular endothelial growth factor. Adiponectin modulates steroid synthetic protein gene expression, increasing steroidogenic acute regulatory protein transcript abundance and reducing cytochrome P450aromatase. Adiponectin has antidiabetic properties and sensitizes tissues to insulin. We show that it interacts with both LH and insulin in inducing expression of cyclooxygenase-2 transcripts in granulosa cells. We determined that the MAPK pathway, via phosphorylation of ERK1/2, is involved in mediation of the adiponectin signal in ovarian granulosa cells, rather than protein kinase A or the classic adiponectin transducer, AMP-activated protein kinase. Adiponectin synthesis is reduced in obesity, and our findings suggest that this reduction plays a role in obesity-related ovarian dysfunction.
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PMID:Adiponectin induces periovulatory changes in ovarian follicular cells. 1691 53

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is now considered as one of the strongest risk factors for all cause mortality and cardiovascular events. However, the link between CKD and systemic events is unclear. The role of the kidney is primarily considered a target organ during the development of obesity as altered production of adipokines from visceral adipocytes, however, it should also be recognized that the kidney itself could alter the clearance and production of adiopokines. In this chapter, we provide a discussion of renal handling of a variety of adipokines. Specifically, there is a growing body of data supporting a major role for the kidney in clearance of insulin, leptin, and TGF-Beta. In addition, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, vascular endothelial growth factor, angiotensin II, and resistin may also be altered by the kidney. The mechanistic regulation of renal handling by the kidney of a variety of circulating adipokines, however is poorly defined. We conclude that the kidney has pivotal roles in the regulation of adipokines and that altered renal handling of adipokines may contribute to the imbalance of factors that ultimately lead to progressive cardiovascular and systemic disease.
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PMID:Renal handling of adipokines. 1692 35

The white adipose tissue, especially of humans, is now recognized as the central player in the mild inflammatory state that is characteristic of obesity. The question is how the increased accumulation of lipid seen in obesity causes an inflammatory state and how this is linked to the hypertension and type 2 diabetes that accompanies obesity. Once it was thought that adipose tissue was primarily a reservoir for excess calories that were stored in the adipocytes as triacylglycerols. In times of caloric deprivation these stored lipids were mobilized as free fatty acids and the insulin resistance of obesity was attributed to free fatty acids. It is now clear that in humans the expansion of adipose tissue seen in obesity results in more blood vessels, more connective tissue fibroblasts, and especially more macrophages. There is an enhanced secretion of some interleukins and inflammatory cytokines in adipose tissue of the obese as well as increased circulating levels of many cytokines. The central theme of this chapter is that human adipose tissue is a potent source of inflammatory interleukins plus other cytokines and that the majority of this release is due to the nonfat cells in the adipose tissue except for leptin and adiponectin that are primarily secreted by adipocytes. Human adipocytes secrete at least as much plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), MCP-1, interleukin-8 (IL-8), and IL-6 in vitro as they do leptin but the nonfat cells of adipose tissue secrete even more of these proteins. The secretion of leptin, on the other hand, by the nonfat cells is negligible. The amount of serum amyloid A proteins 1 & 2 (SAA 1 & 2), haptoglobin, nerve growth factor (NGF), macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), and PAI-1 secreted by the adipocytes derived from a gram of adipose tissue is 144%, 75%, 72%, 37%, and 23%, respectively, of that by the nonfat cells derived from the same amount of human adipose tissue. However, the release of IL-8, MCP-1, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), TGF-beta1, IL-6, PGE(2), TNF-alpha, cathepsin S, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), IL-1beta, IL-10, resistin, C-reactive protein (CRP), and interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) by adipocytes is less than 12% of that by the nonfat cells present in human adipose tissue. Obesity markedly elevates the total release of TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-8 by adipose tissue but only that of TNF-alpha is enhanced in adipocytes. However, on a quantitative basis the vast majority of the TNF-alpha comes from the nonfat cells. Visceral adipose tissue also releases more VEGF, resistin, IL-6, PAI-1, TGF-beta1, IL-8, and IL-10 per gram of tissue than does abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue. In conclusion, there is an increasing recognition that adipose tissue is an endocrine organ that secretes leptin and adiponectin along with a host of other paracrine and endocrine factors in addition to free fatty acids.
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PMID:Release of interleukins and other inflammatory cytokines by human adipose tissue is enhanced in obesity and primarily due to the nonfat cells. 1702 26

The number of patients with diabetes mellitus will increase over the coming years, so that there will also be more patients with diabetic macular oedema. Diabetic macular oedema and diabetic retinopathy are the most important causes of legal blindness in adults. The current therapy of diabetic macular oedema consists of the prevention, detection and treatment of risk factors (e.g., hypertension, hyperglycaemia, dyslipidaemia, proteinuria and obesity), complemented if necessary by photocoagulation therapy. Photocoagulation therapy may prevent or reduce vision loss in many patients, but usually does not improve visual acuity. New treatment strategies include intravitreal corticosteroids or vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) inhibitors, and oral protein kinase C inhibitors, angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, acetylsalicylic acid or statins. The long-term positive effect of these strategies is controversial and the side effects can be serious.
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PMID:[Therapeutic possibilities for diabetic macular oedema]. 1706 28

White adipose tissue (WAT) is now recognized as a highly active metabolic tissue and important endocrine organ producing numerous peptides and proteins with broad biological activity. The term adipokines has been coined to refer to a series of adipocyte-derived biologically active molecules, which may influence the function as well as the structural integrity of other tissues. Adipokines are implicated in control of food intake, energy balance and body weight (leptin), glucose homeostasis (e.g., adiponectin, resistin, adiponutrin), lipid metabolism (e.g., retinol-binding protein, cholesterolester transfer protein), angiogenesis (vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF), fibrinolytic system (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 PAI-1), pro- and anti-inflammatory effects (e.g., tumor necrosis factor-alpha TNF-alpha, interleukin-6 IL-6) or sexual development and reproduction (leptin). Alterations of WAT mass in obesity or lipoatrophy effect the production of most adipose secreted factors. Besides others, alcohol consumption affects also hormonal system leading to non-physiological increase/decrease of hormone gene expression and plasma hormone concentrations appearing as final poor or stronger effects on target tissues. As mentioned above, white adipose tissue is important endocrine organ, so alcohol intake can alter also adipokines expression in WAT and adipokines plasma levels and in this way it can affect the adipokine-targeted tissues and their functions.
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PMID:Alcohol intake modulates hormonal activity of adipose tissue. 1710 May 51

Disentangling the neuroendocrine systems that regulate energy homeostasis and adiposity has been a long-standing challenge in pathophysiology, with obesity being an increasingly important public health problem. Adipose tissue is no longer considered a passive bystander in body-weight regulation. It actively secretes a large number of hormones, growth factors, enzymes, cytokines, complement factors and matrix proteins, at the same time as expressing receptors for most of these elements, which influence fuel storage, mobilisation and utilisation at both central and peripheral sites. Thus, an extensive cross talk at a local and systemic level in response to specific external stimuli or metabolic changes underpins the multifunctional characteristics of adipose tissue. In addition to the already-known adipokines, such as IL, TNFalpha, leptin, resistin and adiponectin, more recently attention has been devoted to 'newcomers' to the 'adipose tissue arena', which include aquaporin, caveolin, visfatin, serum amyloid A and vascular endothelial growth factor. While in vitro and in vivo experiments have provided extremely valuable information, the advances in genomics, proteomics and metabolomics are offering a level of information not previously attainable to help unlock the molecular basis of obesity. The potential and power of combining pathophysiological observations with the wealth of information provided by the human genome, knock-out models, transgenesis, DNA microarrays, RNA silencing and other emerging technologies offer a new and unprecedented view of a complex disease, conferring novel insights into old questions by identifying new pieces to the unfinished jigsaw puzzle of obesity.
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PMID:The Sir David Cuthbertson Medal Lecture. Hunting for new pieces to the complex puzzle of obesity. 1718

The metabolic syndrome is a main cause for cardiovascular disease and for the accelerating epidemic of chronic renal failure. Previous studies show that 2-hydroxyestradiol (2-HE), an estradiol metabolite with little estrogenic activity, decreases obesity and arterial blood pressure and attenuates the development of renal disease in young, obese, diabetic ZSF1 rats. In humans, however, diabetic renal disease is more frequent and severe in older patients. In vivo, 2-HE is readily converted to 2-methoxyestradiol (2-ME), an estradiol metabolite with no estrogenic activity. Accordingly, one purpose of this study was to determine whether 2-ME would provide benefit in aged rats with a very severe form of diabetic renal disease. Another objective was to determine whether synthetic analogs of estradiol metabolites might be beneficial in diabetic renal disease. To achieve these objectives we examined the effects of 2-ME and its analog 2-ethoxyestradiol (2-EE) in aged (35-week-old), obese ZSF1 rats. Animals were treated for 9 weeks with vehicle (PEG-400, 0.5 microL per hour), 2-ME or 2-EE (18 microg/kg per hour). Metabolic and renal function were measured at weeks 0, 3, 6, and 9, and renal hemodynamics and excretory function were assessed at week 9. Aged ZSF1 rats had elevated levels of glycosylated hemoglobin; increased renal cortical expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF); glycosuria, hypertension; and proteinuria. 2-ME and 2-EE did not affect obesity or hypertension and had variable effects on glucose homeostasis, yet they attenuated proteinuria; increased renal blood flow and glomerular filtration; and reduced renal cortical expression of PCNA, NFkappaB, and VEGF. We conclude that 2ME and 2EE are strikingly renoprotective even in aged animals with severe diabetic renal disease. The present study warrants further investigation of 2-ME and analogs of estradiol metabolites for treatment of kidney disease associated with the metabolic syndrome.
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PMID:2-Methoxyestradiol and 2-ethoxyestradiol retard the progression of renal disease in aged, obese, diabetic ZSF1 rats. 1726 64

The metabolic syndrome (MS), a condition characterized by several risk factors for coronary artery disease, including obesity, is associated with endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress. Because proper endothelial function is essential for signaling of certain growth factors (vascular endothelial growth factor, VEGF) we hypothesized that coronary collateral growth (CCG) is impaired in a model of the MS. To test this hypothesis, we stimulated coronary collateral growth in pre-diabetic Zucker obese fatty rats (OZR) and lean littermates (LZR) by using episodic, repetitive ischemia (RI: 40 s left anterior descending arterial occlusion, 24/d for 14 d). Myocardial blood flow (MBF, radioactive microspheres) was measured in the normal (NZ) and collateral-dependent (ischemic) zones (CZ); CCG was assessed as a ratio of CZ/NZ flow (unity represents complete restoration of CZ flow). In LZR, CZ/NZ ratio increased from 0.18 +/- 0.03 to 0.81 +/- 0.07 after RI (P < 0.05). In contrast, in OZR rats CZ/NZ did not increase after RI (0.15 +/- 0.04 vs 0.18 +/- 0.04). To rectify abrogated collateral growth in OZR, we employed VEGF gene therapy (VEGF-transduced, strained-matched, cultured vascular smooth muscle cells [cVSMCs], delivered intracoronary). VEGF therapy modestly but not significantly increased the CZ/NZ ratio after RI (0.16 +/- 0.05 vs 0.33 +/- 0.06). To facilitate VEGF signaling,we reduced oxidative stress by transducing cVSMCs with both ecSOD and VEGF. This increased the CZ/NZ flow ratio after RI to 0.52 +/- 0.04 (p < 0.05 vs. OZR [(0.19 +/- 0.04]) indicating partial restoration of collateral growth. Our results demonstrate that coronary collateral growth is impaired in a model of the metabolic syndrome and that growth factor gene therapy with VEGF is made far more effective when it is coupled to an intervention that reduces oxidative stress.
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PMID:Restoration of coronary collateral growth in the Zucker obese rat: impact of VEGF and ecSOD. 1732 99

The burgeoning field of vascular tissue engineering holds promise for the creation of a practical and successful small-diameter arterial bypass graft. Many creative combinations of autologous cells and scaffolds exist along with an equally long list of microenvironmental cues used to create a functional arterial conduit. This review outlines our work using abdominal wall fat as a source of autologous stem cells for vascular tissue engineering, focusing specifically on this stem cell's availability and potency to differentiate into endothelial-like cells. In a series of 49 patients undergoing elective peripheral vascular surgery, an abundant quantity of adult stem cells was harvested from fat obtained by liposuction. The efficacy of the isolation did not appear influenced by advanced age, obesity, renal failure, or vascular disease, although fat from diabetic patients yielded significantly less stem cells. In addition, these adipose-derived stem cells acquired several morphologic and molecular endothelial phenotypes when exposed to growth factors (endothelial cell growth supplement and vascular endothelial growth factor) and physiologic shear stress in vitro. Taken together, these studies suggest that fat appears to be a viable source of autologous stem cells for use in vascular tissue engineering.
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PMID:Tissue engineering applications to vascular bypass graft development: the use of adipose-derived stem cells. 1754 30

Preeclampsia affects 3-5% of pregnancies and can have a significant impact on health for both mother and fetus. Risk factors include maternal co-morbidities such as obesity and chronic hypertension, paternal factors, and genetic factors. New hypertension and proteinuria during the second half of pregnancy are key diagnostic criteria, but the clinical features and associated prognostic implications are somewhat heterogeneous and may reflect different mechanisms of disease. Renal dysfunction and proteinuria correspond to the pathologic finding of glomerular endotheliosis, and generally resolve after cure of preeclampsia through fetal and placenta delivery. The molecular mechanisms behind this disease are being discovered and refined. The initial etiologic agents are currently unknown. Pathologic studies show abnormal development of an ischemic placenta with a high-resistance vasculature, which cannot deliver an adequate blood supply to the fetoplacental unit. Endothelial dysfunction plays a central role in the pathogenesis of the maternal syndrome. Dysfunctional endothelial cells produce altered quantities of vasoactive mediators, which lead to a tip in the balance towards vasoconstriction. An imbalance in circulating angiogenic factors is emerging as a prominent mechanism that mediates the endothelial dysfunction and the clinical signs and symptoms of preeclampsia. Soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFlt1), an endogenous anti-angiogenic factor that is a potent vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) antagonist, is highly elevated in preeclampsia. VEGF is not only important in angiogenesis, but also in maintaining endothelial health including the formation of endothelial fenestrae (a hallmark of the glomerular vascular endothelium). sFlt1 overexpression in animals induces glomerular endotheliosis with the loss of endothelial fenestrae that resembles the renal histological lesions of preeclampsia. More severe forms of preeclampsia, including the HELLP syndrome, may be explained by a concomitant elevation in both sFlt1 and soluble endoglin, another anti-angiogenic factor. Unraveling of the molecular mechanisms behind preeclampsia may help to expand our armamentarium to treat patients in a more directed fashion, as current management consists of supportive care and expedited delivery. Finally, long-term outcomes of women with preeclampsia include a significantly increased risk for hypertension and cardiovascular disease, including mortality, which may warrant more aggressive screening and treatment in this population.
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PMID:Pre-eclampsia: clinical manifestations and molecular mechanisms. 1757 Sep 33


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