Transcriptomics

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Krill oil treatment increases distinct PUFAs and oxylipins in adipose tissue and liver and attenuates obesity-associated in-flammation via direct and indirect mechanisms


ABSTRACT: The development of obesity is characterized by metabolic overload of tissues and sub-sequent organ inflammation. Health effects of krill oil (KrO) on obesity-associated inflammation remain largely elusive, because long-term treatments with KrO have not been performed so far. In this study, mice were fed an obesogenic diet (HFD) containing 3% (w/w) KrO for 28 weeks. KrO treatment increased the concentrations of EPA and DHA and associated oxylipins, including 18-HEPE, RvE2, 14-HDHA in white adipose tissue (WAT) and liver. Simultaneously, KrO decreased arachidonic acid (ARA) concentrations and ARA-derived oxylipins (e.g. HETEs, PGD2, PGE2, PGF2α, TXB2). In epididymal WAT (eWAT), KrO activated regulators of adipogenesis (e.g. PPARγ, CEBPα, KLF15, STAT5A), induced a shift towards smaller adipocytes and increased total adipocyte numbers indicative for hyperplasia. KrO reduced crown-like structures in eWAT, and suppressed HFD-stimulated inflammatory pathways including TNFα and CCL2/MCP-1 signaling. The ob-served changes in eWAT were accompanied by reduced leptin and increased adiponectin levels over time, and an improvement in insulin resistance (HOMA-IR). In liver, KrO suppressed in-flammatory signaling pathways including those controlled by IL-1β and M-CSF, without affecting liver histology. Furthermore, KrO deactivated hepatic REL-A/p65-NF-κB signaling, consistent with increased PPARα protein expression and a trend increase in IkBα. In conclusion, long-term KrO treatment increased several anti-inflammatory PUFAs and oxylipins in WAT and liver. These changes were accompanied by beneficial effects on general metabolism and inflammatory tone at tissue level. Stimulation of adipogenesis by KrO allows for safe fat storage and may, together with more direct PPAR-mediated anti-inflammatory mechanisms, attenuate inflammation.

ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus

PROVIDER: GSE179396 | GEO | 2021/08/12

REPOSITORIES: GEO

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