FGF21 and its underlying adipose tissue-liver axis inform cardiometabolic burden and improvement in obesity after metabolic surgery.

IF 10.8 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL EBioMedicine Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-27 DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105458
Marie Patt, Isabel Karkossa, Laura Krieg, Lucas Massier, Kassem Makki, Shirin Tabei, Thomas Karlas, Arne Dietrich, Martin Gericke, Michael Stumvoll, Matthias Blüher, Martin von Bergen, Kristin Schubert, Peter Kovacs, Rima M Chakaroun
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Abstract

Background: This research investigates the determinants of circulating FGF21 levels in a cohort reflecting metabolic disease progression, examining the associations of circulating FGF21 with morphology and function of adipose tissue (AT), and with metabolic adjustments following metabolic surgery.

Methods: We measured serum FGF21 in 678 individuals cross-sectionally and in 189 undergoing metabolic surgery longitudinally. Relationships between FGF21 levels, AT histology, transcriptomes and proteomes, cardiometabolic risk factors, and post-surgery metabolic adjustments were assessed using univariate and multivariate analyses, causal mediation analysis, and network integration of AT transcriptomes and proteomes.

Findings: FGF21 levels were linked to central adiposity, subclinical inflammation, insulin resistance, and cardiometabolic risk, and were driven by circulating leptin and liver enzymes. Higher FGF21 were linked with AT dysfunction reflected in fibro-inflammatory and lipid dysmetabolism pathways. Specifically, visceral AT inflammation was tied to both FGF21 elevation and liver dysfunction. Post-surgery, FGF21 peaked transitorily at three months. Mediation analysis highlighted an underlying increased AT catabolic state with elevated free fatty acids (FFA), contributing to higher liver stress and FGF21 levels (total effect of free fatty acids on FGF21 levels: 0.38, p < 0.01; proportion mediation via liver 32%, p < 0.01). In line with this, histological AT fibrosis linked with less pronounced FGF21 responses and reduced fat loss post-surgery (FFA and visceral AT fibrosis: rho = -0.31, p = 0.030; FFA and fat-mass loss: rho = 0.17, p = 0.020).

Interpretation: FGF21 reflects the liver's disproportionate metabolic stress response in both central adiposity and after metabolic surgery, with its dynamics reflecting an AT-liver crosstalk.

Funding: This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) through CRC 1052, project number 209933838, CRC1382 and a Walther-Benjamin Fellowship and by a junior research grant by the Medical Faculty, University of Leipzig, and by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), Germany, FKZ: 01EO1501. Part of this work was supported by the European Union's Seventh Framework Program for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement HEALTH-F4-2012-305312 and by the CRC1382 and the Novo Nordisk Foundation and by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research foundation) project number 530364326.

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FGF21及其潜在的脂肪组织-肝脏轴提示代谢手术后心脏代谢负担和肥胖的改善。
背景:本研究调查了反映代谢性疾病进展的队列中循环FGF21水平的决定因素,研究了循环FGF21与脂肪组织(AT)形态和功能以及代谢手术后代谢调节的关系。方法:我们对678例患者的血清FGF21进行了横断面检测,对189例接受代谢手术的患者进行了纵向检测。通过单因素和多因素分析、因果中介分析以及AT转录组和蛋白质组的网络整合,评估FGF21水平、AT组织学、转录组和蛋白质组、心脏代谢危险因素和术后代谢调整之间的关系。研究发现:FGF21水平与中枢性肥胖、亚临床炎症、胰岛素抵抗和心脏代谢风险有关,并受循环瘦素和肝酶的驱动。较高的FGF21与纤维炎症和脂质代谢异常途径中反映的AT功能障碍有关。具体来说,内脏AT炎症与FGF21升高和肝功能障碍有关。术后3个月FGF21短暂达到峰值。中介分析强调,游离脂肪酸(FFA)升高导致潜在的AT分解代谢状态增加,导致肝脏应激和FGF21水平升高(游离脂肪酸对FGF21水平的总影响:0.38,p)。解释:FGF21反映了中枢性肥胖和代谢手术后肝脏不成比例的代谢应激反应,其动力学反映了AT-肝脏的相互作用。本工作由德国研究基金会(DFG)通过CRC 1052(项目编号209933838,CRC1382)和Walther-Benjamin奖学金支持,并由莱比锡大学医学院和德国联邦教育和研究部(BMBF)提供初级研究资助,FKZ: 01EO1501。本研究的部分工作由欧盟第七个研究、技术开发和示范框架计划(资助协议HEALTH-F4-2012-305312)、CRC1382和诺和诺德基金会以及德国研究基金会(DFG,德国研究基金会)项目编号530364326支持。
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来源期刊
EBioMedicine
EBioMedicine Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology
CiteScore
17.70
自引率
0.90%
发文量
579
审稿时长
5 weeks
期刊介绍: eBioMedicine is a comprehensive biomedical research journal that covers a wide range of studies that are relevant to human health. Our focus is on original research that explores the fundamental factors influencing human health and disease, including the discovery of new therapeutic targets and treatments, the identification of biomarkers and diagnostic tools, and the investigation and modification of disease pathways and mechanisms. We welcome studies from any biomedical discipline that contribute to our understanding of disease and aim to improve human health.
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