TY - JOUR
T1 - Adipocytes in both brown and white adipose tissue of adult mice are functionally connected via gap junctions
T2 - Implications for Chagas disease
AU - Burke, Shoshana
AU - Nagajyothi, Fnu
AU - Thi, Mia M.
AU - Hanani, Menachem
AU - Scherer, Philipp E.
AU - Tanowitz, Herbert B.
AU - Spray, David C.
N1 - Funding Information:
We wish to thank Dahzi Zhao for technical assistance. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health T32 AI070117 to SB, AI076248 to HBT, DK091466 to MMT, AR057139 to DCS and MMT, HL112099 to FN and NBT and by the US-Israel Binational Science Foundation 2011044 to DCS and MH.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014.
PY - 2014/11/1
Y1 - 2014/11/1
N2 - Adipose tissue serves as a host reservoir for the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative organism in Chagas disease. Gap junctions interconnect cells of most tissues, serving to synchronize cell activities including secretion in glandular tissue, and we have previously demonstrated that gap junctions are altered in various tissues and cells infected with T. cruzi. Herein, we examined the gap junction protein connexin 43 (Cx43) expression in infected adipose tissues. Adipose tissue is the largest endocrine organ of the body and is also involved in other physiological functions. In mammals, it is primarily composed of white adipocytes. Although gap junctions are a prominent feature of brown adipocytes, they have not been explored extensively in white adipocytes, especially in the setting of infection. Thus, we examined functional coupling in both white and brown adipocytes in mice. Injection of electrical current or the dye Lucifer Yellow into adipocytes within fat tissue spread to adjacent cells, which was reduced by treatment with agents known to block gap junctions. Moreover, Cx43 was detected in both brown and white fat tissue. At thirty and ninety days post-infection, Cx43 was downregulated in brown adipocytes and upregulated in white adipocytes. Gap junction-mediated intercellular communication likely contributes to hormone secretion and other functions in white adipose tissue and to nonshivering thermogenesis in brown fat, and modulation of the coupling by T. cruzi infection is expected to impact these functions.
AB - Adipose tissue serves as a host reservoir for the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative organism in Chagas disease. Gap junctions interconnect cells of most tissues, serving to synchronize cell activities including secretion in glandular tissue, and we have previously demonstrated that gap junctions are altered in various tissues and cells infected with T. cruzi. Herein, we examined the gap junction protein connexin 43 (Cx43) expression in infected adipose tissues. Adipose tissue is the largest endocrine organ of the body and is also involved in other physiological functions. In mammals, it is primarily composed of white adipocytes. Although gap junctions are a prominent feature of brown adipocytes, they have not been explored extensively in white adipocytes, especially in the setting of infection. Thus, we examined functional coupling in both white and brown adipocytes in mice. Injection of electrical current or the dye Lucifer Yellow into adipocytes within fat tissue spread to adjacent cells, which was reduced by treatment with agents known to block gap junctions. Moreover, Cx43 was detected in both brown and white fat tissue. At thirty and ninety days post-infection, Cx43 was downregulated in brown adipocytes and upregulated in white adipocytes. Gap junction-mediated intercellular communication likely contributes to hormone secretion and other functions in white adipose tissue and to nonshivering thermogenesis in brown fat, and modulation of the coupling by T. cruzi infection is expected to impact these functions.
KW - Adipose tissue
KW - Chagas disease
KW - Connexin43
KW - Gap junctions
KW - Trypanosoma cruzi
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U2 - 10.1016/j.micinf.2014.08.006
DO - 10.1016/j.micinf.2014.08.006
M3 - Article
C2 - 25150689
AN - SCOPUS:84919445678
SN - 1286-4579
VL - 16
SP - 893
EP - 901
JO - Microbes and Infection
JF - Microbes and Infection
IS - 11
ER -