Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.

The distribution of adipose tissue in the body has wide-ranging and reproducible associations with health and disease. Accumulation of adipose tissue in the upper body (abdominal obesity) is associated with the development of cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus and e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Karpe, F, Pinnick, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2015
_version_ 1826299312543367168
author Karpe, F
Pinnick, K
author_facet Karpe, F
Pinnick, K
author_sort Karpe, F
collection OXFORD
description The distribution of adipose tissue in the body has wide-ranging and reproducible associations with health and disease. Accumulation of adipose tissue in the upper body (abdominal obesity) is associated with the development of cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus and even all-cause mortality. Conversely, accumulation of fat in the lower body (gluteofemoral obesity) shows opposite associations with cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus when adjusted for overall fat mass. The abdominal depots are characterized by rapid uptake of predominantly diet-derived fat and a high lipid turnover that is easily stimulated by adrenergic receptor activation. The lower-body fat stores have a reduced lipid turnover with a capacity to accommodate fat undergoing redistribution. Lower-body adipose tissue also seems to retain the capacity to recruit additional adipocytes as a result of weight gain and demonstrates fewer signs of inflammatory insult. New data suggest that the profound functional differences between the upper-body and lower-body tissues are controlled by site-specific sets of developmental genes, such as HOXA6, HOXA5, HOXA3, IRX2 and TBX5 in subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue and HOTAIR, SHOX2 and HOXC11 in gluteofemoral adipose tissue, which are under epigenetic control. This Review discusses the developmental and functional differences between upper-body and lower-body fat depots and provides mechanistic insight into the disease-protective effects of lower-body fat.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:00:00Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:d7f41e19-46a5-44b2-8993-7572d1a0fb2d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:00:00Z
publishDate 2015
publisher Nature Publishing Group
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:d7f41e19-46a5-44b2-8993-7572d1a0fb2d2022-03-27T08:44:45ZBiology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d7f41e19-46a5-44b2-8993-7572d1a0fb2dEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordNature Publishing Group2015Karpe, FPinnick, KThe distribution of adipose tissue in the body has wide-ranging and reproducible associations with health and disease. Accumulation of adipose tissue in the upper body (abdominal obesity) is associated with the development of cardiovascular disease, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus and even all-cause mortality. Conversely, accumulation of fat in the lower body (gluteofemoral obesity) shows opposite associations with cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus when adjusted for overall fat mass. The abdominal depots are characterized by rapid uptake of predominantly diet-derived fat and a high lipid turnover that is easily stimulated by adrenergic receptor activation. The lower-body fat stores have a reduced lipid turnover with a capacity to accommodate fat undergoing redistribution. Lower-body adipose tissue also seems to retain the capacity to recruit additional adipocytes as a result of weight gain and demonstrates fewer signs of inflammatory insult. New data suggest that the profound functional differences between the upper-body and lower-body tissues are controlled by site-specific sets of developmental genes, such as HOXA6, HOXA5, HOXA3, IRX2 and TBX5 in subcutaneous abdominal adipose tissue and HOTAIR, SHOX2 and HOXC11 in gluteofemoral adipose tissue, which are under epigenetic control. This Review discusses the developmental and functional differences between upper-body and lower-body fat depots and provides mechanistic insight into the disease-protective effects of lower-body fat.
spellingShingle Karpe, F
Pinnick, K
Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title_full Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title_fullStr Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title_full_unstemmed Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title_short Biology of upper-body and lower-body adipose tissue-link to whole-body phenotypes.
title_sort biology of upper body and lower body adipose tissue link to whole body phenotypes
work_keys_str_mv AT karpef biologyofupperbodyandlowerbodyadiposetissuelinktowholebodyphenotypes
AT pinnickk biologyofupperbodyandlowerbodyadiposetissuelinktowholebodyphenotypes