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Role of the endocannabinoid system in adipose tissue function - implications for inflammation
Reference
BB/E009522/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Paul Trayhurn
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr Chen Bing
Institution
University of Liverpool
Department
Clinical Sciences
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
300,585
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
06/11/2006
End date
05/11/2009
Duration
36 months
Abstract
Obesity, characterised by a substantial increase in adipose tissue mass, results from an imbalance between energy intake and expenditure. Several neuroendocrine factors which regulate appetite are recognised, a recent addition being the 'endocannabinoids' which are orexigenic. The endocannabinoids act through two receptors, CB1 and CB2, located in brain regions and peripheral organs. The endocannabinoids have multiple functions, in addition to appetite, including an anti-inflammatory action. Adipose tissue is an important site of inflammation in obesity, releasing a number of key proteins involved in the inflammatory response; inflammation is thought to lead to the disorders associated with being obese. Adipose tissue expresses the CB1 receptor, suggesting that it is a target for endocannabinoids. The core aim of this project is to examine the hypothesis that endocannabinoids have an anti-inflammatory action in adipose tissue by modulating the production of inflammatory adipokines, and this will be tested using human adipocytes in culture. mRNA will be quantitated by real time PCR and proteins measured by ELISA and western blotting. The key objectives are to: (i) examine the effects of CB1 receptor agonists and antagonists on the expression and secretion of candidate adipokines (including leptin, adiponectin, IL-6, TNFalpha, MCP-1, VEGF), with and without stimulation by lipopolysaccharide; (ii) utilise DNA microarrays to examine the effect of cannabinoid receptor agonists/antagonists on global patterns of adipocyte gene expression, including signal transduction pathways; (iii) block CB1 receptor mRNA and protein synthesis using siRNA and determine the effects on adipokine production; (iv) establish whether NF-kB activation is inhibited by CB1 receptor agonists; (v) assess whether macrophages are a local source of endocannabinoids within adipose tissue using co-culture; (vi) examine whether there are changes in CB1 receptor levels in adipose tissue in obesity.
Summary
There is considerable public and scientific focus on obesity, which is now a major health problem in the UK and other industrialised countries. Obesity is, of course, characterised by a major increase in the amount of body fat and this is stored in a specialised organ called white adipose tissue. Obesity is the result of an imbalance between the amount of food energy that we eat and the energy expended in all our daily activities. A number of factors are involved in determining the quantity of food that is eaten and there are important chemicals in the brain which help control our intake. A recent addition to these factors is the naturally occurring group of chemicals called 'endocannabinoids', which stimulate appetite. The endocannabinoids, which are related to the plant cannabinoids, act to influence our physiology through special proteins on the outside of cells called 'CB receptors'. There are two type of CB receptor, CB1 and CB2, and these are found in cells in the brain as well as in other organs. Although the effects on appetite are an important part of the action of endocannabinoids, these substances are thought to also affect other functions in the body. One important action which is beginning to be recognised is in inflammation, endocannabinoids having an anti-inflammatory action. Adipose tissue is a major site of inflammation in obesity, with the tissue producing and releasing a number of important proteins which are involved in the inflammatory response. This inflammatory process in fat tissue is considered to lead to some of the disorders associated with being obese - such as cardiovascular disease and the type of diabetes that occurs through a resistance to the hormone insulin. The specialised fat storage cells in adipose tissue contain CB1 receptors, suggesting that the tissue is a target for the action of endocannabinoids. Indeed, it has also already been shown that these substances affect how fat is used in adipose tissue. The central aim of this project is to examine the novel idea that endocannabinoids may help control the production of the proteins involved in inflammation in adipose tissue. The idea will be tested by examining the effects of cannabinoids and substances that block the CB1 receptor on the production and release by the tissue of the proteins related to inflammation. This will be done mainly by using human fat cells cultured in the laboratory. Overall, the project will help us to understand the actions of the endocannabinoids as a normal part of how our body functions. It may also help to establish ways of avoiding the effects on our health and normal physiology of being overweight and obese, by providing new targets for drug development for treating the consequences of obesity.
Committee
Closed Committee - Agri-food (AF)
Research Topics
Immunology, Neuroscience and Behaviour
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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