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Targeting Adipose Tissue Inflammation to Treat the Underlying Basis of the Metabolic Complications of Obesity

机译:靶向脂肪组织炎症以治疗肥胖代谢并发症的潜在基础

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The prevalence of obesity has increased throughout the last three decades due to genetic, metabolic, behavioral, and environmental factors [1]. Obesity in turn increases risk for a number of metabolic diseases including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, fatty liver disease and some forms of cancer [1]. Despite the well-known link between obesity and increased morbidity, the mechanism of this remains elusive. Thus, the question 'why does increased body fat cause increased metabolic comorbidities' remains unanswered. By understanding the underlying basis of obesity-associated metabolic diseases, different therapies could be designed to target relevant pathways. Although we lack a full understanding of the underlying mechanisms that result in disease, several putative explanations exist for why fat affects metabolic health. One such theory is based on the anatomic location of fat deposition and ectopic fat accumulation [2]. Specifically, current literature suggests that visceral, liver and skeletal fat accumulation affects organ function and contributes to the development of insulin resistance, fatty liver, and the metabolic syndrome [3]. However, even in individuals matched for body fat and fat distribution, significant differences can exist in metabolic outcomes, and the phenomenon of metabolically healthy obese has been well described [4]. More recent data suggest the alternative hypothesis relating excess adipose tissue to disease risk based on the metabolic function and morphological properties of adipose tissue. In this scenario, excess adipose tissue is hypothesized to contribute to a state of chronic inflammation which promotes development of insulin resistance as well as other metabolic complications by stimulating nuclear factor-KB and Jun N-terminal kinase pathways in adipocytes and the liver [5]. In this paper, we will review the hypothesis linking excess adipose tissue to increased disease risk through adipose tissue inflammation.
机译:由于遗传,代谢,行为和环境因素,在过去三十年中,肥胖的患病率增加了[1]。肥胖反过来增加了许多代谢疾病的风险,包括2型糖尿病,心血管疾病,脂肪肝疾病和某种形式的癌症[1]。尽管肥胖与发病率增加的众所周知的联系,但这仍然难以捉摸。因此,问题“为什么体脂增加的原因增加了代谢可变性”仍然没有答案。通过了解肥胖相关的代谢疾病的潜在基础,可以设计不同的疗法来瞄准相关途径。虽然我们对导致疾病导致的潜在机制缺乏全面了解,但为什么脂肪影响代谢健康的若干规定的解释。一种这样的理论是基于脂肪沉积的解剖学位置和异位脂肪积累[2]。具体而言,目前的文献表明,内脏,肝脏和骨骼脂肪累积影响器官功能并有助于胰岛素抵抗,脂肪肝和代谢综合征的发展[3]。然而,即使在匹配体脂和脂肪分布的个体中,代谢结果可能存在显着差异,并且代谢健康肥胖的现象已经很好地描述了[4]。最近的数据表明,基于脂肪组织的代谢功能和形态学性质,替代假设将过量的脂肪组织与疾病风险相关。在这种情况下,假设过量的脂肪组织以有助于促进胰岛素抵抗的发育的慢性炎症状态以及通过刺激腹膜细胞和肝脏中的核因子-Kb和Jun n末端激酶途径以及其他代谢并发症的致胰岛素抵抗和其他代谢并发症[5] 。在本文中,我们将通过脂肪组织炎症审查将过量脂肪组织的假设连接到增加疾病风险。

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