Extracellular Cleavage of Microglia-Derived Progranulin Promotes Diet-Induced Obesity.

Journal: Diabetes
Published:
Abstract

: Hypothalamic innate immune responses to dietary fats underpin the pathogenesis of obesity, in which microglia play a critical role. Progranulin (PGRN) is an evolutionarily conserved secretory protein containing seven and a half granulin (GRN) motifs. It is cleaved into GRNs by multiple proteases. In the central nervous system, PGRN is highly expressed in microglia. To investigate the role of microglia-derived PGRN in metabolism regulation, we established a mouse model with a microglia-specific deletion of the Grn gene, which encodes PGRN. Mice with microglia-specific Grn depletion displayed diet-dependent metabolic phenotypes. Under normal diet-fed conditions, microglial Grn depletion produced adverse outcomes, such as fasting hyperglycemia and aberrant activation of hypothalamic microglia. However, when fed a high-fat diet (HFD), these mice exhibited beneficial effects, including less obesity, glucose dysregulation, and hypothalamic inflammation. These differing phenotypes appeared to be linked to increased extracellular cleavage of anti-inflammatory PGRN into proinflammatory GRNs in the hypothalamus during overnutrition. In support of this, inhibiting PGRN cleavage attenuated HFD-induced hypothalamic inflammation and obesity progression. Our results suggest that the extracellular cleavage of microglia-derived PGRN plays a significant role in promoting hypothalamic inflammation and obesity during periods of overnutrition. Therefore, therapies that inhibit PGRN cleavage may be beneficial for combating diet-induced obesity. null

Authors
Chae Park, Chan Lee, Kae Cho, Sunghun Shin, Won Jang, Junyeong Byeon, Yu Oh, Sung Kim, Jae Park, Gil Kang, Se Min, Seyun Kim, Rina Yu, Min-seon Kim
Relevant Conditions

Obesity