Insulin resistance causes inflammation in adipose tissue
- Shimobayashi, Mitsugu
- Albert, Verena
- Woelnerhanssen, Bettina
- Frei, Irina C.
- Weissenberger, Diana
- Meyer-Gerspach, Anne Christin
- Clement, Nicolas
- Moes, Suzette
- Colombi, Marco
- Meier, Jerome A.
- Swierczynska, Marta M.
- Jenö, Paul
- Beglinger, Christoph
- Peterli, Ralph
- Hall, Michael N.
Obesity is a major risk factor for insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. In adipose tissue, obesity-mediated insulin resistance correlates with the accumulation of proinflammatory macrophages and inflammation. However, the causal relationship of these events is unclear. Here, we report that obesity-induced insulin resistance in mice precedes macrophage accumulation and inflammation in adipose tissue. Using a mouse model that combines genetically induced, adipose-specific insulin resistance (mTORC2-knockout) and diet-induced obesity, we found that insulin resistance causes local accumulation of proinflammatory macrophages. Mechanistically, insulin resistance in adipocytes results in production of the chemokine monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP1), which recruits monocytes and activates proinflammatory macrophages. Finally, insulin resistance (high homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance [HOMA-IR]) correlated with reduced insulin/mTORC2 signaling and elevated MCP1 production in visceral adipose tissue from obese human subjects. Our findings suggest that insulin resistance in adipose tissue leads to inflammation rather than vice versa.