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Development of high‐fat‐diet‐induced obesity in female metallothionein‐null mice
97
Citations
44
References
2010
Year
Oxidative stress accelerates adipocyte differentiation and lipid accumulation, leading to endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, which causes insulin resistance. Because metallothionein (MT) has a role in prevention of oxidative and ER stress, we examined the effects of MT on the development of obesity induced by 27 wk of a high-fat diet (HFD) in female MT-I- and MT-II-null (MT(-/-)) and wild-type (MT(+/+)) mice. Body weight, fat mass, and plasma cholesterol increased at a greater rate in MT(-/-) mice fed an HFD than in MT(-/-) mice fed a control diet (CD) and MT(+/+) mice fed an HFD, indicating that MT(-/-) mice fed an HFD became obese and hypercholesterolemic and that MT could prevent HFD-induced obesity. The observed increases in the levels of plasma leptin and leptin mRNA in the white adipose tissue of MT(-/-) mice fed the HFD suggested a leptin-resistant state. Enhanced expression of a mesoderm-specific transcript, which regulates the enlargement of fat cells, was accompanied by enlarged adipocytes in the white adipose tissue of young MT(-/-) mice before obesity developed after 3 and 8 wk of feeding the HFD. Thus, MT may have a preventive role against HFD-induced obesity by regulating adipocyte enlargement and leptin signaling.
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