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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

INVESTIGATING SOURCES OF PERIPHERAL SEROTONIN SYNTHESIS: IMPLICATIONS FOR REGULATING METABOLISM

Yabut, Julian January 2020 (has links)
PhD Dissertation / Obesity is a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes (T2D) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and is attributed to excess energy intake in comparison to energy expenditure. Therapeutics that reduce energy intake in obesity have limited efficacy, with weight loss typically reaching less than 10% of initial body mass, leading to efforts to uncover new therapies that may increase energy expenditure. Unlike lipid-storing white adipose tissue, brown and beige adipose tissues undergo futile cycling, oxidizing lipids and carbohydrates thereby increasing energy expenditure. With obesity, the metabolic activity of brown and beige adipose tissue is reduced, suggesting that restoring adipose tissue thermogenesis may represent a new means to enhance energy expenditure. Previous studies in mice have shown that peripheral serotonin synthesis by the enzyme tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (Tph1) inhibits adipose tissue thermogenesis and contributes to the development of obesity, insulin resistance and NAFLD. However, the primary Tph1 expressing tissue(s) inhibiting adipose tissue futile cycling is not known. In this thesis, we genetically removed Tph1 in mast cells of mice and discovered that this elevated beige adipose tissue activity protecting mice from developing high-fat diet induced obesity, insulin resistance and NAFLD. In contrast to these findings, genetic deletion of Tph1 in adipocytes did not result in protection from obesity, suggesting that mast cells are the primary source of serotonin that inhibits white adipose tissue thermogenesis. Lastly, to determine the importance of adipose tissue thermogenesis in mediating the beneficial metabolic effects of reduced Tph1, mice were housed at thermoneutrality, blocking the requirement for adipose tissue thermogenesis. Under these conditions, mice lacking Tph1 had comparable brown and beige adipose tissue metabolic activity, energy expenditure and adiposity, however, surprisingly, were still protected from insulin resistance and NAFLD. The studies in this dissertation have discovered that mast cell Tph1 is critical for inhibiting adipose tissue thermogenesis and that serotonin plays an important role in promoting NAFLD, independently of its inhibitory effects on adipose tissue thermogenesis. Collectively, these findings further define the roles of serotonin in regulating whole-body energy metabolism, providing critical clues and mechanistic insights for potential therapies to mitigate metabolic diseases. / Dissertation / Doctor of Philosophy (Medical Science) / Obesity, type 2 diabetes (T2D) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) can develop when caloric intake exceeds expenditure. In contrast to lipid-storing white fat, brown and beige fat burn calories. Serotonin is a hormone that reduces the burning of calories in fat, therefore finding ways to inhibit its effects on fat tissue without altering serotonin in the brain may lead to new therapies for obesity and other related diseases. In this thesis, we examined potential sources of serotonin that might inhibit the burning of calories in adipose tissue of mice. By reducing the synthesis of serotonin in a white blood cell called mast cells, but not fat cells, mice were protected from obesity, pre-diabetes and NAFLD due to increased activity of beige fat. Moreover, when we kept mice in a warm environment, thus reducing the need for mice to burn calories in brown and beige fat, this eliminated the effects of serotonin to promote obesity, but not pre-diabetes and NAFLD. These studies have identified how serotonin generated from mast cells inhibits the burning of calories in adipose tissue, a finding that may lead to new therapies for obesity, T2D and NAFLD.
2

The Origin of Human White, Brown, and Brite/Beige Adipocytes

Min, So Yun 16 December 2016 (has links)
During embryonic development, adipocytes emerge from microvasculature. Lineage-­‐tracing studies in mice have shown that adipocyte progenitors reside in the adipose tissue capillaries. However, the direct evidence of an association between adipocyte progenitors and vasculature in humans is lacking. A specific class of adipocytes (brown and beige/brite) expresses the uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), which consumes glucose and fatty acids to generate heat. The abundance of UCP1- containing adipocytes correlates with a lean metabolically healthy phenotype in human. However, a causal relationship between the presence of these cells and metabolic benefits in human is not clear. In this thesis, I report human adipocyte progenitors proliferate in response to pro-angiogenic factors in association with adipose capillary networks in-vitro. The capillary-derived adipocytes transform from being UCP1-negative to positive upon adenylate cyclase activation, a defining feature of the brite/beige phenotype. Activated cells have denser, round mitochondria with UCP1 protein, and display uncoupled respiration. When implanted into NOD-scid IL2rgnull (NSG) mice, the adipocytes can form a vascularized fat pad that induces vascularization and becomes integrated into mouse circulatory system. In normal or high fat diet-fed NSG mice, activated brite/beige adipocytes enhance systemic glucose tolerance and improved hepatic steatosis, thus providing evidence for their potential therapeutic use. The adipocytes also express neuroendocrine and secretory factors such as Interleukin-33, proprotein convertase PCSK1 and proenkephalin PENK, which are correlated with human obesity. Finally, analyses on single-cell clones of capillary-sprout cells reveal the existence of diverse adipogenic progenitor populations. Further characterization of the clones will define the identifying features of the diverse adipocyte progenitor types that exist in human adipose tissue.

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