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EGFR-mediated activation of adipose tissue macrophages promotes obesity and insulin resistance

Shirong Cao, Yu Pan, Jiaqi Tang, Andrew S. Terker, Juan Pablo Arroyo, Guan-nan Jin, Yinqiu Wang, Aolei Niu, Xiaofeng Fan, Suwan Wang, Raymond C. Harris, Ming‐Zhi Zhang

2022Nature Communications70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Obesity and obesity-related health complications are increasing in prevalence. Adipose tissue from obese subjects has low-grade, chronic inflammation, leading to insulin resistance. Adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) are a source of proinflammatory cytokines that further aggravate adipocyte dysfunction. In response to a high fat diet (HFD), ATM numbers initially increase by proliferation of resident macrophages, but subsequent increases also result from infiltration in response to chemotactic signals from inflamed adipose tissue. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms regulating the increases in ATMs and their proinflammatory phenotype, we investigated the role of activation of ATM epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). A high fat diet increased expression of EGFR and its ligand amphiregulin in ATMs. Selective deletion of EGFR in ATMs inhibited both resident ATM proliferation and monocyte infiltration into adipose tissue and decreased obesity and development of insulin resistance. Therefore, ATM EGFR activation plays an important role in adipose tissue dysfunction.

Topics & Concepts

Adipose tissueProinflammatory cytokineAdipose tissue macrophagesAmphiregulinInsulin resistanceInternal medicineInflammationEndocrinologyAdipocyteCancer researchMedicineWhite adipose tissueObesityReceptorEpidermal growth factor receptorAdipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic DiseasesAdipose Tissue and MetabolismImmune cells in cancer
EGFR-mediated activation of adipose tissue macrophages promotes obesity and insulin resistance | Litcius