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Hepatocyte-derived exosomes from early onset obese mice promote insulin sensitivity through miR-3075

Authors :
Yudong, Ji
Zhenlong, Luo
Hong, Gao
Felipe Castellani Gomes, Dos Reis
Gautam, Bandyopadhyay
Zhongmou, Jin
Kameswari Ananthakrishnan, Manda
Roi, Isaac
Meixiang, Yang
Wenxian, Fu
Wei, Ying
Jerrold M, Olefsky
Source :
Nature metabolism. 3(9)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In chronic obesity, hepatocytes become insulin resistant and exert important effects on systemic metabolism. Here we show that in early onset obesity (4 weeks high-fat diet), hepatocytes secrete exosomes that enhance insulin sensitivity both in vitro and in vivo. These beneficial effects were due to exosomal microRNA miR-3075, which is enriched in these hepatocyte exosomes. FA2H is a direct target of miR-3075 and small interfering RNA depletion of FA2H in adipocytes, myocytes and primary hepatocytes leads to increased insulin sensitivity. In chronic obesity (16-18 weeks of a high-fat diet), hepatocyte exosomes promote a state of insulin resistance. These chronic obese hepatocyte exosomes do not directly cause impaired insulin signalling in vitro but do promote proinflammatory activation of macrophages. Taken together, these studies show that in early onset obesity, hepatocytes produce exosomes that express high levels of the insulin-sensitizing miR-3075. In chronic obesity, this compensatory effect is lost and hepatocyte-derived exosomes from chronic obese mice promote insulin resistance.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
3
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........82dddfeef862c8e26009dd5865ea3469