Deletion of MMP12 improves energy metabolism and brown adipose tissue function in mice prone to cardiometabolic disease
Melina Amor, Malena Diaz, Alexander Fuerlinger, Monika Svecla, Valentina Bianco, Laszlo Schooltink, Anja Dobrijević, Birgit Schwarz, Alena Akhmetshina, Nemanja Vujić, Melanie Korbelius, Martin Hirtl, Martin Buerger, Anita Pirchheim, Silvia Rainer, Silvia Schauer

TL;DR
Deleting the MMP12 gene in mice improves energy metabolism and brown fat function, reducing inflammation and cholesterol levels.
Contribution
This study shows that MMP12 deletion improves brown adipose tissue function and energy expenditure in a cardiometabolic mouse model.
Findings
MMP12 deletion increases energy expenditure and reduces brown adipose tissue triglyceride content.
Loss of MMP12 reduces macrophage infiltration and inflammation in brown adipose tissue.
Cold exposure enhances the beneficial effects of MMP12 deletion on lipid metabolism and thermogenesis.
Abstract
Matrix metalloproteinase-12 (MMP12) is a proinflammatory macrophage-secreted protein with immunomodulatory functions that affects neutrophil infiltration, cytokine release, macrophage recruitment, and proliferation. We have previously demonstrated that the genetic deletion of MMP12 in a cardiometabolic mouse model ameliorates obesity-induced low-grade inflammation, white adipose tissue dysfunction, and atherosclerosis. Based on the various beneficial metabolic effects of MMP-12 deletion, we hypothesized that loss of MMP-12 also positively affects whole-body energy metabolism and/or brown adipose tissue (BAT) function in a cardiometabolic mouse model. To investigate the effects of MMP12 deletion on whole-body energy metabolism and/or BAT function, we used low-density lipoprotein receptor (Ldlr)/Mmp12 double knockout (DKO) fed a high-fat, sucrose- and cholesterol-enriched diet. DKO mice…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdipose Tissue and Metabolism · Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases · Muscle Physiology and Disorders
