Pathophysiology of obesity

There are many possible pathophysiological mechanisms involved in the development and maintenance of obesity.[1]

A graphic depiction of a leptin molecule

Research

This field of research had been almost unapproached until the leptin gene was discovered in 1994 by J. M. Friedman's laboratory.[2] These investigators postulated that leptin was a satiety factor. In the ob/ob mouse, mutations in the leptin gene resulted in the obese phenotype opening the possibility of leptin therapy for human obesity. However, soon thereafter J. F. Caro's laboratory could not detect any mutations in the leptin gene in humans with obesity. On the contrary Leptin expression was increased proposing the possibility of Leptin-resistance in human obesity.[3] Since this discovery, many other hormonal mechanisms have been elucidated that participate in the regulation of appetite and food intake, storage patterns of adipose tissue, and development of insulin resistance. Since leptin's discovery, ghrelin, insulin, orexin, PYY 3-36, cholecystokinin, adiponectin, as well as many other mediators have been studied. The adipokines are mediators produced by adipose tissue; their action is thought to modify many obesity-related diseases.

Appetite

Leptin and ghrelin are considered to be complementary in their influence on appetite, with ghrelin produced by the stomach modulating short-term appetitive control (i.e. to eat when the stomach is empty and to stop when the stomach is stretched). Leptin is produced by adipose tissue to signal fat storage reserves in the body, and mediates long-term appetitive controls (i.e. to eat more when fat storages are low and less when fat storages are high). Although administration of leptin may be effective in a small subset of obese individuals who are leptin-deficient, most obese individuals are thought to be leptin resistant and have been found to have high levels of leptin.[4] This resistance is thought to explain in part why administration of leptin has not been shown to be effective in suppressing appetite in most obese people.[1]

While leptin and ghrelin are produced peripherally, they control appetite through their actions on the central nervous system. In particular, they and other appetite-related hormones act on the hypothalamus, a region of the brain central to the regulation of food intake and energy expenditure. There are several circuits within the hypothalamus that contribute to its role in integrating appetite, the melanocortin pathway being the most well understood.[1] The circuit begins with an area of the hypothalamus, the arcuate nucleus, that has outputs to the lateral hypothalamus (LH) and ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), the brain's feeding and satiety centers, respectively.[5]

Arcuate nucleus

The arcuate nucleus contains two distinct groups of neurons.[1] The first group coexpresses neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related peptide (AgRP) and has stimulatory inputs to the LH and inhibitory inputs to the VMH. The second group coexpresses pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) and has stimulatory inputs to the VMH and inhibitory inputs to the LH. Consequently, NPY/AgRP neurons stimulate feeding and inhibit satiety, while POMC/CART neurons stimulate satiety and inhibit feeding. Both groups of arcuate nucleus neurons are regulated in part by leptin. Leptin inhibits the NPY/AgRP group while stimulating the POMC/CART group. Thus a deficiency in leptin signaling, either via leptin deficiency or leptin resistance, leads to overfeeding and may account for some genetic and acquired forms of obesity.[1]

Immune system

Obesity has been associated with an inflammatory state, which is chronic and low-grade inflammation, known as meta-inflammation.[6][7] Meta-inflammation is subclinical meaning that while there is an increase in circulating pro-inflammatory factors, no clinical signs of inflammation, heat, pain, and redness, are seen with meta-inflammation.[8] Based on the immune system cells involved, both innate and adaptive immunity are involved in meta-inflammation.[8]

There are different types of obesity depending on where fat cells are stored. Abdominal obesity, excess fat cell accumulation in adipose tissue of the abdomen, is associated more strongly with meta-inflammation.[9]

Evolutionarily, adipose tissue has been shown to function as an immune organ.[8] The immune cells located in adipose tissue are important for maintaining metabolic homeostasis. With obesity, the immune cells important for maintaining metabolic homeostasis are suppressed because immune cell function and immune cell amount are affected by excess fat accumulation in adipose tissue.[7][8] Excess fat accumulation can lead to insulin resistance, and insulin resistance has been linked to meta-inflammation.[8] With insulin resistance, there is an increase in macrophages, mast cells, neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes, and a decrease in eosinophils and some T lymphocytes.[8]

Obesity has also been shown to induce hypoxic conditions in adipose cells.[6][9] Hypoxic conditions result from fat cells expanding, and this decreases vascularization to surrounding fat cells.[6][7][8] Decreased vascularization results in decreased amounts of oxygen in adipose tissue so adipose cells have to switch to anaerobic metabolism for energy production.[9] Anaerobic metabolism stimulates inflammation caused by macrophages.[9] There are two types of macrophages, classically activated M1 macrophages that increase inflammation and alternatively activated M2 macrophages that decrease inflammation. In animal studies, obesity has been shown to cause a shift from M2 to M1 macrophages in adipose tissue, causing an increase in inflammation.[7][8][9]

References

  1. Flier JS (2004). "Obesity wars: Molecular progress confronts an expanding epidemic". Cell (Review). 116 (2): 337–50. doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(03)01081-X. PMID 14744442.
  2. Zhang, Y; Proenca, R; Maffei, M; Barone, M; Leopold, L; Friedman, JM (Dec 1, 1994). "Positional cloning of the mouse obese gene and its human homologue". Nature (Research Support). 372 (6505): 425–32. doi:10.1038/372425a0. PMID 7984236.
  3. Considine, RV; Considine, EL; Williams, CJ; Nyce, MR; Magosin, SA; Bauer, TL; Rosato, EL; Colberg, J; Caro, JF (Jun 1995). "Evidence against either a premature stop codon or the absence of obese gene mRNA in human obesity". The Journal of Clinical Investigation (Research Support). 95 (6): 2986–8. doi:10.1172/jci118007. PMC 295988. PMID 7769141.
  4. Hamann A, Matthaei S (1996). "Regulation of energy balance by leptin". Exp. Clin. Endocrinol. Diabetes (Review). 104 (4): 293–300. doi:10.1055/s-0029-1211457. PMID 8886745.
  5. Boulpaep, Emile L.; Boron, Walter F. (2003). Medical physiology: A cellular and molecular approach. Philadelphia: Saunders. p. 1227. ISBN 0-7216-3256-4.
  6. Segovia, S. A.; Vickers, M. H.; Reynolds, C. M. (October 2017). "The impact of maternal obesity on inflammatory processes and consequences for later offspring health outcomes". Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease. 8 (5): 529–540. doi:10.1017/s2040174417000204. ISSN 2040-1744.
  7. Lumeng, Carey N.; Saltiel, Alan R. (2011-06-01). "Inflammatory links between obesity and metabolic disease". Journal of Clinical Investigation. 121 (6): 2111–2117. doi:10.1172/jci57132. ISSN 0021-9738. PMC 3104776.
  8. Mraz, Milos; Haluzik, Martin (2014-09-01). "The role of adipose tissue immune cells in obesity and low-grade inflammation". Journal of Endocrinology. 222 (3): R113–R127. doi:10.1530/joe-14-0283. ISSN 0022-0795. PMID 25006217.
  9. Heredia, Fátima Pérez de; Gómez-Martínez, Sonia; Marcos, Ascensión (May 2012). "Obesity, inflammation and the immune system". Proceedings of the Nutrition Society. 71 (2): 332–338. doi:10.1017/s0029665112000092. ISSN 1475-2719.
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