Ectopic brown adipose tissue formation within skeletal muscle after brown adipose progenitor cell transplant augments energy expenditure.pdf (2.72 MB)
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journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-22, 20:12 authored by Yang Liu, Wenyan Fu, Kendall Seese, Amelia Yin, Hang YinBrown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis increases energy expenditure (EE). Expanding the volume of
active BAT via transplantation holds promise as a therapeutic strategy for morbid obesity and diabetes. Brown
adipose progenitor cells (BAPCs) can be isolated and expanded to generate autologous brown adipocyte implants.
However, the transplantation of brown adipocytes is currently impeded by poor efficiency of BAT tissue formation
in vivo and undesirably short engraftment time. In this study, we demonstrated that transplanting BAPCs into limb
skeletal muscles consistently led to the ectopic formation of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1)+pos adipose tissue with
long-term engraftment (>4 mo). Combining VEGF with the BAPC transplant further improved BAT formation in
muscle. Ectopic engraftment ofBAPC-derivedBAT in skeletalmuscle augmented the EE of recipientmice. Although
UCP1 expression declined in long-term BAT grafts, this deterioration can be reversed by swimming exercise because
of sympathetic activation. This study suggests that intramuscular transplantation of BAPCs represents a promising
approach to derive functional BAT engraftment, which may be applied to therapeutic BAT transplantation and
tissue engineering.