Adipose tissue
white adipose tissue storage process
1. Ingested lipids in digestive tract 2. Digested to triglycerides 3. Triglycerides transported across digestive epithelium and into circulation blood 4. Across capillary endothelium and into adipocytes 5. Concentration into single intracellular lipid droplet
White adipose tissue catabolism
1. Lipid droplet converted to triglycerides by lipase enzyme 2. Triglycerides re-enter circulation (blood), available to tissues as energy source
Brown adipose
AKA multilocular - generates heat: burning fat to create heat rather than to generate energy (ATP) and in upper back posterior neck region
white/yellow adipose tissue
AKA unilocular - storage of lipids and later catabolism and release stored piping as triglycerides as an energy source
Leptin signaling defects proposed
Decreased leptin production or decreased leptin sensitivity of hypothalamus
Adiopokines
Family of signals made and released by white adipose affecting various body systems like immune cell regulation adiponectin and angiotensinogen
Role of adipose tissue and obesity
Growth and leptin signaling defects proposed
White adipose tissue structure
Honeycomb appearance, rings of cell membrane, small cytoplasmic compartment, most of cell is for lipid storage Each circular shaped adipocyte is surrounded by connective tissue containing blood vessels
Growth and obesity
Hypertorphy and hyperplasia - enlargement of cells and cell proliferation - both leading to increased lipid storage capac
Regulation of brown adipose tissue
In adults it can expand in response to significant exposure to cold temperatures
Brown adipose tissue loaction
In newborns located in upper back between scapulas or posterior neck region, virtually non-existent in adults due to other heat generation mechanisms
Insulin
Increase glucose uptake by adipocytes, converge to triglycerides
Angiotensinogen
Increases blood pressure
Brown adipose tissue appearance
Multiple lipid droplets, higher concentration of mitochondria gives brown color
Glucagon
Promotes catabolism of stored fat
Hibernoma
Rare, benign, slow-growing tumors of brown fat; often found in the periscapular region; usually contain a mix of white and brown fat -Pure hibernomas are very rare
Adipose tissue
Tissue that stores fat.
Lipoma
a benign, slow-growing fatty tumor located between the skin and the muscle layer
Adiponectin
a protein produced by adipose cells that inhibits inflammation and protects against insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease
Visceral fat
fat stored within the abdominal cavity in association with the internal abdominal organs
hormones of adipose tissue
leptin, adiponectin, resistin
Liposarcoma
malignant tumor composed of fat
Lipase
pancreatic enzyme necessary to digest fats
Leptin
protein hormone secreted by fat cells; when abundant, causes brain to increase metabolism and decrease hunger