Regulation of adipose tissue energy availability through blood flow control in the metabolic syndrome

M Alemany - Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2012 - Elsevier
Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2012Elsevier
Maintenance of blood flow rate is a critical factor for tissue oxygen and substrate supply. The
potentially large mass of adipose tissue deeply influences the body distribution of blood
flow. This is due to increased peripheral resistance in obesity and the role of this tissue as
the ultimate destination of unused excess of dietary energy. However, adipose tissue cannot
grow indefinitely, and the tissue must defend itself against the avalanche of nutrients
provoking inordinate growth and inflammation. In the obese, large adipose tissue masses …
Maintenance of blood flow rate is a critical factor for tissue oxygen and substrate supply. The potentially large mass of adipose tissue deeply influences the body distribution of blood flow. This is due to increased peripheral resistance in obesity and the role of this tissue as the ultimate destination of unused excess of dietary energy. However, adipose tissue cannot grow indefinitely, and the tissue must defend itself against the avalanche of nutrients provoking inordinate growth and inflammation. In the obese, large adipose tissue masses show lower blood flow, limiting the access of excess circulating substrates. Blood flow restriction is achieved by vasoconstriction, despite increased production of nitric oxide, the vasodilatation effects of which are overridden by catecholamines (and probably also by angiotensin II and endothelin). Decreased blood flow reduces the availability of oxygen, provoking massive glycolysis (hyperglycemic conditions), which results in the production of lactate, exported to the liver for processing. However, this produces local acidosis, which elicits the rapid dissociation of oxyhemoglobin, freeing bursts of oxygen in localized zones of the tissue. The excess of oxygen (and of nitric oxide) induces the production of reactive oxygen species, which deeply affect the endothelial, blood, and adipose cells, inducing oxidative and nitrosative damage and eliciting an increased immune response, which translates into inflammation. The result of the defense mechanism for adipose tissue, localized vasoconstriction, may thus help develop a more generalized pathologic response within the metabolic syndrome parameters, extending its effects to the whole body.
Elsevier