Subcutaneous abdominal preadipocyte differentiation in vitro inversely correlates with central obesity

Paska A. Permana, Saraswathy Nair, Yong-Ho Lee, Georgia Luczy-Bachman, Barbora Vozarova de Courten, and P. Antonio Tataranni

Clinical Diabetes and Nutrition Section, Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Phoenix, Arizona 85016

Submitted 2 December 2003 ; accepted in final form 9 February 2004


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
 REFERENCES
 
Expansion of adipose tissue mass results from increased number and size of adipocyte cells. We hypothesized that subcutaneous abdominal preadipocytes in obese individuals might have an intrinsically higher propensity to differentiate into adipocytes. Thus we investigated the relationship between obesity and the level of in vitro preadipocyte differentiation in Pima Indians. Subcutaneous abdominal stromal vascular fractions containing preadipocytes were cultured from 58 nondiabetic subjects [31 M/27 F, 30 ± 6 yr, body fat 34 ± 8% by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (means ± SD)]. The average percentage of preadipocyte differentiation (PDIFF; cell count by microscopy) was 11 ± 11% (range 0.2–51%). PDIFF correlated negatively with percent body fat (r = –0.35, P = 0.006) and waist circumference (r = –0.45, P = 0.0004). Multiple regression analysis indicated that waist circumference (P = 0.01), sex (P = 0.01), and percent body fat (P = 0.05) were significant determinants of PDIFF. Molecular characterization of predifferentiated cultured cells was performed by real-time PCR measurements of glucocorticoid receptor-{alpha} (GR{alpha}), insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGF-IR), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-{gamma} (PPAR{gamma}), enhancer-binding protein GATA-3, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-{alpha} undifferentiated protein (CUP/AP-2{alpha}), and endothelial cell-specific marker 2 (ECSM2). The mRNA concentrations of GR{alpha} correlated with PDIFF (r = 0.29, P = 0.03), but the others did not (IGF-IR, r = 0.003, P = 1.0; PPAR{gamma}, r = –0.1, P = 0.5; GATA-3, r = 0.02, P = 0.9; CUP/AP-2{alpha}, r = –0.2, P = 0.1; ECSM2, r = 0.04, P = 0.7). Contrary to our hypothesis, the results may indicate a blunted in vitro differentiation potential of preadipocytes in centrally obese individuals. The lower differentiation potential of preadipocytes in the obese subjects might be due, at least partly, to decreased glucocorticoid receptor expression.

Pima Indians; gene expression; glucocorticoid receptor; adipogenesis


OBESITY, CHARACTERIZED BY EXCESS ADIPOSE TISSUE, is a common health problem with increasing prevalence around the world (25). Obesity, particularly central obesity, is an important risk factor for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease (15, 16, 26).

Increase in adipose tissue mass results from increases in adipocyte cell size (hypertrophy) and adipocyte cell number (hyperplasia). Adipocyte volume reflects a balance in lipogenesis and lipolysis, whereas adipocyte number is determined by recruitment of adipocyte precursor cells (preadipocytes) to become adipocytes and cell death. The differentiation process of preadipocytes into mature adipocytes presumably occurs throughout the human life span, since preadipocytes from adult subjects can be isolated from adipose tissue, propagated, and differentiated into adipocytes in vitro (6, 7). This methodology to differentiate primary preadipocytes in culture has been widely used to dissect the highly controlled molecular process involving a complex transcriptional cascade.

As a key element of obesity development, preadipocyte differentiation may be intrinsically regulated. We hypothesized that abdominal preadipocytes in obese people would have an intrinsically elevated propensity to differentiate into adipocytes. To test our hypothesis, we investigated the relationship between the degree of obesity and the level of in vitro abdominal subcutaneous preadipocyte differentiation in subjects with a wide range of obesity. We conducted this study in Pima Indians of Arizona, a population with one of the highest prevalence rates of obesity (13).


    MATERIALS AND METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
 REFERENCES
 
Subjects. Fifty-eight nondiabetic Pima or Tohono O'Odham Indians volunteered for this study. All subjects were in good health as determined by medical history and physical examination as well as routine blood and urine tests. None was taking medication at the time of the study. All subjects provided written informed consent before participation. This study was approved by the Tribal Council of the Gila River Indian Community and the Institutional Review Board of the National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

Clinical protocol. Volunteers were admitted to the Clinical Research Unit, where they were placed on a weight-maintaining diet (containing 50% of calories as carbohydrates, 30% as fat, and 20% as protein) for 2–3 days before clinical testing. Body composition was measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry using a total body scanner (DPX-L; Lunar Radiation, Madison, WI) as described previously (20). Waist circumference was measured at the umbilicus with subjects in the supine position. Oral glucose tolerance tests using 75 g of glucose were performed to exclude diabetic subjects as defined by the World Health Organization criteria (1).

After an overnight fast, the subjects underwent subcutaneous abdominal fat needle biopsy under local anesthesia with 1% lidocaine. Adipose tissue was placed on a sterile nylon mesh and rinsed with sterile 0.9% NaCl solution. The tissue was then cleaned of visible connective tissue and blood vessels in Hanks' buffered saline solution (HBSS) supplemented with 5.5 mM glucose.

Preadipocyte isolation, growth, and differentiation. Isolation of the stromal vascular fraction containing preadipocytes was performed according to a previously described method by Crandall et. al. (4), with some modifications. Briefly, the adipose tissue was digested in HBSS buffer containing 5.5 mM glucose, 5% fatty acid-free BSA (Introgen/Serologicals, Norcross, GA) and 3.3 mg/ml type I collagenase (Worthington Biochemical, Lakewood, NJ) for 30 min in a 37°C water bath. The digestion mixture was passed through a sterile 230-µm stainless steel tissue sieve (Thermo EC, Holbrook, NY), and the adipocytes were allowed to float by gravity. The preadipocyte-containing infranatant was collected into another tube and washed several times by centrifugation at 585 g for 5 min. The supernatant was discarded, and the stromal vascular fraction pellet containing preadipocytes was resuspended in standard medium consisting of Medium 199 (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 1 µg/ml amphotericin B, 100 U/ml penicillin G sodium, 100 µg/ml streptomycin sulfate, 2 mM glutamax-1, and 10% heat-inactivated FBS (Life Technologies). The suspension was strained through a sterile 25-µm stainless steel tissue sieve (Thermo EC). The filtrate was transferred to a T75 culture flask and maintained in an incubator at 37°C in 5% CO2. Cells were allowed to attach, and the next day floating red blood cells were removed by aspiration, and the culture medium was replenished. Medium was changed every 2–3 days unless otherwise noted. At subconfluence, the cultured cells were trypsinized and plated in duplicate 35-mm dishes at 5 x 104 cells/dish for differentiation and 1.5 x 106 cells/15 cm dish for RNA extraction (see below). The stromal vascular cells from all samples were typically cultured for 14 days before induction of differentiation. When the cell monolayer cultures in the 35-mm dishes reached ~90% confluence, they were induced to differentiate by the addition of Medium 199 supplemented with 10–8 M insulin, 10–6 M hydrocortisone, and 0.5 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine for the first 5 days. Subsequently, the culture was maintained in standard medium containing 3% FBS, 10–8 M insulin, and 10–6 M hydrocortisone. Primary human skin fibroblasts that were cultured in a similar manner served as a negative control for this differentiation procedure. The differentiation of preadipocytes into lipid-filled cells with adipocyte morphology was monitored morphologically until 18 days after induction of differentiation, when the number of lipid-containing cells should have reached a plateau (8). At this time, the cell monolayer was fixed and stained according to a published protocol (18) with some modifications. Briefly, the cell monolayer was fixed in 10% formaldehyde solution at 4°C for 1–2 h. The cells were then rinsed with water and 60% isopropanol before staining with 0.3% Oil Red O at room temperature for 20 min. Representative color pictures representing 4.5-mm2 areas were taken at x40 magnification using a Polaroid Microcam (Polaroid, Cambridge, MA) on an inverted microscope (Eclipse TE200; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan). The photomicrographs served as templates for determining the percentage of preadipocyte differentiation (PDIFF), which was calculated as the ratio of the number of lipid-filled cells to the total cell number multiplied by 100 (%). The values of PDIFF were independently scored by two people, and we used the mean of the two individual analyses of the duplicate dishes from each subject.

Determination of adipocyte cell size. In a subset of 14 subjects, with enough adipocyte preparation, we determined the adipocyte cell perimeters and calculated the cell volumes. Packed adipocytes were mixed at a ratio of 1:2 with Medium 199 (Life Technologies) containing 1% heat-inactivated FBS (Life Technologies), 1% BSA (Introgen/Serologicals), and 50 nM adenosine (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) on a chambered slide covered with a coverslip. Representative pictures of the adipocytes were taken using a Polaroid Microcam (Polaroid) on an inverted microscope (Eclipse TE200), and the adipocyte cell perimeters on the images were measured using Scion Image (Scion, Frederick, MD). The mean cell volume from each subject was calculated from the mean cell perimeter with standard equations.

Preadipocyte RNA isolation and cDNA synthesis. An RNeasy Mini Kit from Qiagen (Valencia, CA) was used to extract total RNA from ~90% confluent, undifferentiated cell cultures of the stromal vascular fraction containing preadipocytes grown in 15-cm dishes. During the extraction, the RNA was treated with DNAse by use of RNAse-free DNAse Set (Qiagen) per manufacturer's instruction. The quality of the RNA was assessed by agarose gel electrophoresis. One microgram of RNA from each sample was used to prepare oligo(dT)-primed cDNA by using the Advantage RT for PCR kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) following the manufacturer's recommendation, and the cDNA was stored at –70°C. Successful cDNA synthesis was verified by PCR amplification of {beta}2-microglobulin transcript by using forward primer 5'-TGT CTT TCA GCA AGG ACT GGT C-3' and reverse primer 5'-TGA TGC TGC TTA CAT GTC TCG AT-3'.

Transcript levels of glucocorticoid receptor-{alpha}, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-{gamma}, IGF-I receptor, GATA-3, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-{alpha} undifferentiated protein, and endothelial cell-specific marker 2 in cultured stromal vascular fraction. We measured transcript levels of several genes in total RNA extracted from the stromal vascular cultures before differentiation to better characterize the predifferentiated cultured cells at the molecular level. We determined the transcript levels of receptors involved in transmitting the signals from the differentiation inducer mixture: glucocorticoid receptor-{alpha} (GR{alpha}) and IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR). We also measured the mRNA concentrations of transcription factors peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-{gamma} (PPAR{gamma}), enhancer-binding protein GATA-3 [inhibitor of PPAR{gamma} and CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-{alpha} (C/EBP{alpha})] (20), and C/EBP{alpha} undifferentiated protein (CUP/AP-2{alpha}, inhibitor of C/EBP{alpha}) (10, 11). To assess the level of endothelial cell contamination in the stromal vascular cultures, we determined the mRNA concentration of endothelial cell-specific marker 2 (ECSM2) (9). The sequences for the ECSM2 primers were as previously described (9). All real-time PCR primers were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technologies (Coralville, IA). The real-time PCR probes accompanying the primers for each gene were designed using Primer Express 1.5 software (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) and obtained from Applied Biosystems. The probes were labeled with 6FAM and TAMRA at the 5' and 3' ends, respectively. The primer and probe sequences of the genes are described in Table 1. Human cyclophilin with optimized primers and probe (Pre-developed Taqman Assay Reagents Endogenous Control Human Cyclophilin kit, Applied Biosystems) was used as the normalization gene. Real-time PCR was performed using Universal Taqman mix in the ABI 7700 sequence detector (Applied Biosystems). The final concentrations of primers and probe were 0.9 and 0.25 µM, respectively. A standard curve for each primer-probe set was generated by serial dilution of a randomly chosen cDNA sample done in triplicate. Each sample was run in duplicate, and the mean values of the duplicates were used to calculate transcript level. Real-time PCR was performed as recommended by the manufacturer as follows: 50°C, 2 min; 95°C, 10 min; 95°C, 15 s; and 60°C, 1 min for 40 cycles.


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Table 1. Real-time PCR primer and probe sequences to measure transcript levels of GR{alpha}, IGF-IR, PPAR{gamma}, GATA-3, CUP/AP-2{alpha}, and ECSM2 genes

 
Statistical analysis. Statistical analyses were performed using the procedures of the Statistical Analysis System software (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). P values of <0.05 (unadjusted for multiple testing) were considered significant. To approximate normal distribution of percentage data, percent PDIFF was logit-transformed with the formula: logit(x) = ln (x/1 – x), where 0 < x < 1. To approximate normal distribution of the gene transcript levels and plasma insulin concentration, the data were logarithmically transformed. Each gene mRNA concentration was normalized to that of cyclophilin by taking the residuals after linear regression to cyclophilin. General linear regression models were used to assess the relationships between PDIFF and obesity measures or fasting plasma insulin.


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
 REFERENCES
 
The anthropometric and metabolic characteristics of the subjects with a wide range of obesity (body fat 12–49%, waist circumference 69–160 cm) and their correlations with PDIFF are summarized in Table 2. The average PDIFF was 11 ± 11% (mean ± SD) with a range between 0.2 and 51%. The negative correlations of PDIFF with percent body fat and waist circumference are illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2, respectively. Table 3 shows the result of multiple regression analysis performed to identify determinants of PDIFF, with sex (P < 0.01), percent body fat (P < 0.05), and waist circumference (P = 0.01) being significant determinants. Fasting plasma insulin concentration was not a significant determinant in this analysis. Fasting plasma glucose concentration was also not a significant determinant (P = 0.8) after adjustments for sex, percent body fat, and waist circumference.


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Table 2. Anthropometric and metabolic characteristics of Pima Indian subjects and Pearson correlations with percent PDIFF

 


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Fig. 1. Negative correlation between percent body fat and percent in vitro primary preadipocyte differentiation (PDIFF; r = –0.35, P = 0.006). {circ}, males; {bullet}, females.

 


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Fig. 2. Negative correlation between waist circumference and percent in vitro primary PDIFF (r = –0.45, P = 0.0004). {circ}, males; {bullet}, females.

 

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Table 3. Multiple regression analysis to identify determinants of PDIFF level

 
We determined the mRNA concentrations of several genes in the predifferentiated stromal vascular cells that might have contributed to the subsequent PDIFF correlations observed. The mRNA concentrations of GR{alpha} correlated with PDIFF (r = 0.29, P = 0.03; Fig. 3), but the others did not (IGF-IR, r = 0.003, P = 1.0; PPAR{gamma}, r = –0.1, P = 0.5; GATA-3, r = 0.02, P = 0.9; CUP/AP-2{alpha}, r = –0.2, P = 0.1). The expression level of ECSM2, as a measure of endothelial cell proportion in the stromal vascular cultures, was not correlated with PDIFF (r = 0.04, P = 0.7). The ECSM2 transcript was detectable in human primary culture of skin fibroblasts that could not be differentiated into adipocytes (data not shown).



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Fig. 3. Positive correlation between glucocorticoid receptor-{alpha} mRNA and percent PDIFF (r = 0.29, P = 0.03). {circ}, males; {bullet}, females.

 
The mean ± SD volume of isolated adipocytes in a subset of 14 subjects was 0.00028 ± 0.00015 mm3. PDIFF was weakly correlated with the adipocyte volume measurement (r = –0.49, P = 0.08).


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
 REFERENCES
 
We utilized in vitro primary culture to investigate whether subcutaneous abdominal preadipocytes from individuals with increased obesity had a greater intrinsic potential to differentiate into adipocytes. Interestingly, our results showed that the percentage of in vitro PDIFF correlated negatively and independently with the degree of obesity and central adiposity as measured by percent body fat and waist circumference. Thus the data indicated that the stromal vascular fraction of subcutaneous abdominal fat tissue from centrally obese individuals might contain more preadipocytes with intrinsically blunted differentiation potential in vitro than tissue from lean people. This finding was consistent with data in a recent human study showing a negative correlation between body mass index and differentiation capacity in mammary preadipocytes as assessed biochemically and morphologically using a serum-free differentiation protocol (21), as well as data indicating that preadipocytes from obese rodents differentiate to a lesser extent than those from lean counterparts when subjected to a differentiation mixture similar to the one used in this study (3, 17). These results may be due to paracrine factors secreted by mature adipocytes of obese subjects that irreversibly inhibit PDIFF, such as transforming growth factor-{beta} (22). Nevertheless, the exact mechanism requires further investigation. Additional results from our data analysis indicated that PDIFF was not correlated with the age of the young subjects in our study, which is consistent with the finding that a general decrease in the potential of PDIFF is observed mainly during middle to old age in humans (7, 12).

We reasoned that the intrinsic molecular causes of the lower differentiation potential in preadipocytes of obese individuals would be best investigated in undifferentiated stromal vascular cultures. The presumably different existing levels of several PDIFF modulators in the undifferentiated cells of the obese subjects could then negatively affect cellular adipogenesis when the cells were exposed to differentiation stimuli. These molecular modulators include receptors for insulin and hydrocortisone that comprised the differentiating mixture. We found that PDIFF correlated positively with the GR{alpha} transcript levels. GR{alpha} is considered the predominant physiological splice variant of the gene encoding glucocorticoid receptor, since GR{alpha} protein binds glucocorticoid ligand (2). The expression of GR{alpha} is regulated by its own ligand; cortisol predominantly downregulates GR{alpha} mRNA expression and stability (2). The potential role of intracellular cortisol level in regulating GR{alpha} expression in these undifferentiated preadipocytes remains to be clarified. The lower in vitro differentiation potential of preadipocytes in the obese subjects of this study might be due, at least partly, to lower mRNA level of GR{alpha} and thus likely fewer glucocorticoid receptors in the undifferentiated preadipocytes. A recent study indicated that the ligand-binding domain of glucocorticoid receptors mediated the glucocorticoid stimulation of PDIFF through enhancement of C/EBP{alpha} expression (24). Thus the lower concentrations of glucocorticoid receptors in the undifferentiated preadipocytes of obese individuals might predispose the cells to have less effective C/EBP{alpha} activation during the PDIFF.

We also measured the mRNA concentration of IGF-IR in the undifferentiated cells, since supraphysiological concentration (10 nM) of insulin in the in vitro differentiation mixture most likely promoted differentiation through these receptors (14). The expression level of IGF-IR did not correlate with PDIFF; thus the number of these receptors before differentiation was unlikely to contribute to the variance in PDIFF. In addition, we measured the mRNA levels of the proadipogenic transcription factor PPAR{gamma} and two adipogenic inhibitors, GATA-3 (20) and CUP/AP-2{alpha} (10, 11). GATA-3 represses the transcriptional activities of key adipogenic transcription factors PPAR{gamma} and C/EBP{alpha} (20), and CUP/AP-2{alpha} inhibits the activity of C/EBP{alpha} (10, 11). Our results indicated that the mRNA levels of these transcription factors in undifferentiated stromal vascular cultures did not correlate with PDIFF. It is conceivable that the lower intrinsic differentiation potential of subcutaneous preadipocytes in the obese subjects of this study was due to the downregulation of other promoters of adipogenesis and/or upregulation of adipogenic inhibitors.

The adipocyte cell size from the available subset of 14 subjects in this study was weakly negatively correlated with PDIFF. This observation warrants further investigation in a larger number of subjects and raises the question whether a reduced differentiation potential in preadipocytes is associated with increased average size of adipocytes in people exposed to long-term excess energy intake. Enlarged subcutaneous adipocyte cell size predicts the development of type 2 diabetes (23). Thus it might be possible that blunted PDIFF in centrally obese subjects is associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (5).

There are potential confounding factors in this study to be considered. We used a typical in vitro PDIFF mixture that contained insulin, which may lead to the speculation that the negative correlations between PDIFF and waist circumference of the donors were due solely to the fact that the harvested preadipocytes from hyperinsulinemic, obese subjects retained their insulin resistance in long-term culture. Nevertheless, the lack of correlation between PDIFF and fasting insulin, when adjusted for waist circumference and percent body fat, renders this explanation unlikely.

As mentioned above, endothelial cells represent the major "contaminant" of cultured preadipocytes (7), and technical procedures during biopsy might have resulted in different proportions of endothelial cells from lean vs. obese subjects. However, this was not likely the case, because the expression level of ECSM2, a corollary of endothelial contamination level in the cultured stromal vascular cells, did not correlate with PDIFF of the same cultures. Primary fibroblast contamination of the stromal vascular fraction was also an unlikely explanation, because we found that ECSM2 was expressed in cultured human primary fibroblasts, even though ECSM2 appeared to be more endothelial specific than the classic endothelial marker von Willebrand factor (9).

In summary, our study shows that the level of primary preadipocyte differentiation in vitro correlated negatively with the degree of central obesity in Pima Indians. The lower differentiation potential of preadipocytes in the centrally obese subjects might be due, at least partly, to decreased expression of GR{alpha}.


    DISCLOSURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
 REFERENCES
 
Current affiliation of P. A. Permana: Carl T. Hayden Veterans Affairs Medical Center, ERS/151, 650 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85012.


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank the members and leaders of the Gila River Indian Community, without whose cooperation these studies would have been impossible. We gratefully acknowledge Drs. Richard Pratley and Joy Bunt, and Mike Milner, Lynette Azure, Carol Massengil, the nurses of the Clinical Research Ward, and the metabolic kitchen staff for the care of the research volunteers, and Emma Rousseau for excellent technical assistance. We thank Dr. Robert Hanson for statistical help and Drs. Brian Walker and Deborah Wake for providing GR{alpha} sequences. The BSA and collagenase were kind gifts of Dr. Samuel Cushman (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD). We also thank Dr. Elliot Danforth for critical review of the manuscript.


    FOOTNOTES
 

Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: P.A. Permana, Carl T. Hayden Veterans Affairs Medical Center, ERS/151, 650 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85012 (Email: paska.permana{at}med.va.gov).

The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.


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 DISCUSSION
 DISCLOSURES
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