Transcriptome profiling reveals divergent expression shifts in brown and white adipose tissue from long-lived GHRKO mice
Author(s) -
Michael B. Stout,
William R. Swindell,
Xu Zhi,
Kyle H. Rohde,
Edward O. List,
Darlene E. Berryman,
John J. Kopchick,
Adam Gesing,
Yimin Fang,
Michał M. Masternak
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oncotarget
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.373
H-Index - 127
ISSN - 1949-2553
DOI - 10.18632/oncotarget.5760
Subject(s) - transcriptome , biology , white adipose tissue , phenotype , brown adipose tissue , growth hormone receptor , gene expression profiling , mitochondrial biogenesis , gene expression , lipid metabolism , adipose tissue , endocrinology , gene , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , mitochondrion , hormone , genetics , growth hormone
Mice lacking the growth hormone receptor (GHRKO) exhibit improved lifespan and healthspan due to loss of growth hormone signaling. Both the distribution and activity of brown and white adipose tissue (BAT and WAT) are altered in GHRKO mice, but the contribution of each tissue to age-related phenotypes has remained unclear. We therefore used whole-genome microarrays to evaluate transcriptional differences in BAT and WAT depots between GHRKO and normal littermates at six months of age. Our findings reveal a unique BAT transcriptome as well as distinctive responses of BAT to Ghr ablation. BAT from GHRKO mice exhibited elevated expression of genes associated with mitochondria and metabolism, along with reduced expression of genes expressed by monocyte-derived cells (dendritic cells [DC] and macrophages). Largely the opposite was observed in WAT, with increased expression of DC-expressed genes and reduced expression of genes associated with metabolism, cellular respiration and the mitochondrial inner envelope. These findings demonstrate divergent response patterns of BAT and WAT to loss of GH signaling in GHRKO mice. These patterns suggest both BAT and WAT contribute in different ways to phenotypes in GHRKO mice, with Ghr ablation blunting inflammation in BAT as well as cellular metabolism and mitochondrial biogenesis in WAT.
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