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Adipocyte lipolysis protects mice against Trypanosoma brucei infection

Henrique Machado, Peter Hofer, Rudolf Zechner, Terry Smith, Luísa M. Figueiredo

2023Nature Microbiology22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Trypanosoma brucei causes African trypanosomiasis, colonizing adipose tissue and inducing weight loss. Here we investigated the molecular mechanisms responsible for adipose mass loss and its impact on disease pathology. We found that lipolysis is activated early in infection. Mice lacking B and T lymphocytes fail to upregulate adipocyte lipolysis, resulting in higher fat mass retention. Genetic ablation of the rate-limiting adipose triglyceride lipase specifically from adipocytes ( Adipoq Cre/+ -Atgl fl/fl ) prevented the stimulation of adipocyte lipolysis during infection, reducing fat mass loss. Surprisingly, these mice succumbed earlier and presented a higher parasite burden in the gonadal adipose tissue, indicating that host lipolysis limits parasite growth. Consistently, free fatty acids comparable with those of adipose interstitial fluid induced loss of parasite viability. Adipocyte lipolysis emerges as a mechanism controlling local parasite burden and affecting the loss of fat mass in African trypanosomiasis.

Topics & Concepts

LipolysisAdipocyteAdipose tissueTrypanosoma bruceiBiologyEndocrinologyInternal medicineLipodystrophyTrypanosomiasisImmunologyBiochemistryMedicineViral loadAntiretroviral therapyGeneHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Trypanosoma species research and implicationsCalcium signaling and nucleotide metabolismLysosomal Storage Disorders Research
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