Obesity-associated proinflammatory cytokines increase calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) protein expression in primary human adipocytes and LS14 human adipose cell line
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Cifuentes, Mariana
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Obesity-associated proinflammatory cytokines increase calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) protein expression in primary human adipocytes and LS14 human adipose cell line
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Abstract
Obesity-associated health complications are thought to be in part due to the low-grade proinflammatory
state that characterizes this disease. The calcium sensing receptor (CaSR), which is expressed in human
adipose cells, plays an important role in diseases involving inflammation. To assess the relevance of this
protein in adipose pathophysiology, we evaluated its expression in adipocytes under obesity-related proinflammatory
conditions. As in primary adipose cells, we established that LS14, a recently described
human adipose cell line, expresses the CaSR. Differentiated LS14 and primary adipose cells were exposed
overnight to cytokines typically involved in obesity-related inflammation (interleukin (IL)1b, IL6 and
tumor necrosis factor (TNF)a). The cytokines increased CaSR abundance in differentiated adipocytes.
We incubated LS14 cells with medium previously conditioned (CM) by adipose tissue from subjects with
a wide range of body mass index (BMI). Cells exposed to CM from subjects of higher BMI underwent a
greater increase in CaSR protein, likely resulting from the greater proinflammatory cytokines secreted
from obese tissue. Our observations that proinflammatory factors increase CaSR levels in adipocytes,
and the reported ability of CaSR to elevate cytokine levels, open new aspects in the study of obesity inflammatory
state pathophysiology, providing a potential novel therapeutic prevention and treatment target.
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Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics 500 (2010) 151–156
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