Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.

In mammals, calories ingested in excess of those used are stored primarily as fat in adipose tissue; consistent ingestion of excess calories requires an enlargement of the adipose tissue mass. Thus, a dysfunction in adipose tissue growth may be a key factor in insulin resistance due to imbalanced fa...

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Main Authors: Jennifer MacKellar, Samuel W Cushman, Vipul Periwal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2809739?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3ebb294f868a4b128e59776da50356172020-11-25T01:02:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-01-0151e819710.1371/journal.pone.0008197Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.Jennifer MacKellarSamuel W CushmanVipul PeriwalIn mammals, calories ingested in excess of those used are stored primarily as fat in adipose tissue; consistent ingestion of excess calories requires an enlargement of the adipose tissue mass. Thus, a dysfunction in adipose tissue growth may be a key factor in insulin resistance due to imbalanced fat storage and disrupted insulin action. Adipose tissue growth requires the recruitment and then the development of adipose precursor cells, but little is known about these processes in vivo.In this study, adipose cell-size probability distributions were measured in two Zucker fa/fa rats over a period of 151 and 163 days, from four weeks of age, using micro-biopsies to obtain subcutaneous (inguinal) fat tissue from the animals. These longitudinal probability distributions were analyzed to assess the probability of periodic phenomena.Adipose tissue growth in this strain of rat exhibits a striking temporal periodicity of approximately days. A simple model is proposed for the periodicity, with PPAR signaling driven by a deficit in lipid uptake capacity leading to the periodic recruitment of new adipocytes. This model predicts that the observed period will be diet-dependent.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2809739?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer MacKellar
Samuel W Cushman
Vipul Periwal
spellingShingle Jennifer MacKellar
Samuel W Cushman
Vipul Periwal
Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jennifer MacKellar
Samuel W Cushman
Vipul Periwal
author_sort Jennifer MacKellar
title Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
title_short Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
title_full Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
title_fullStr Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
title_full_unstemmed Waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese Zucker fatty rat.
title_sort waves of adipose tissue growth in the genetically obese zucker fatty rat.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-01-01
description In mammals, calories ingested in excess of those used are stored primarily as fat in adipose tissue; consistent ingestion of excess calories requires an enlargement of the adipose tissue mass. Thus, a dysfunction in adipose tissue growth may be a key factor in insulin resistance due to imbalanced fat storage and disrupted insulin action. Adipose tissue growth requires the recruitment and then the development of adipose precursor cells, but little is known about these processes in vivo.In this study, adipose cell-size probability distributions were measured in two Zucker fa/fa rats over a period of 151 and 163 days, from four weeks of age, using micro-biopsies to obtain subcutaneous (inguinal) fat tissue from the animals. These longitudinal probability distributions were analyzed to assess the probability of periodic phenomena.Adipose tissue growth in this strain of rat exhibits a striking temporal periodicity of approximately days. A simple model is proposed for the periodicity, with PPAR signaling driven by a deficit in lipid uptake capacity leading to the periodic recruitment of new adipocytes. This model predicts that the observed period will be diet-dependent.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2809739?pdf=render
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AT samuelwcushman wavesofadiposetissuegrowthinthegeneticallyobesezuckerfattyrat
AT vipulperiwal wavesofadiposetissuegrowthinthegeneticallyobesezuckerfattyrat
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