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Research Article

Weak Functional Coupling of the Melanocortin-1 Receptor Expressed in Human Adipocytes

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 485-504 | Published online: 19 Nov 2008
 

Abstract

The melanocortin (MC) receptor type-1 (MC1-R) is the only one of the five MC receptor subtypes expressed in human adipose tissue explants, human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), and MSC-derived adipocytes. Following our recent expression studies (Obesity 2007, 15, 40–49), we now investigated the functional role of MC1-R in these tissues and cells to deduce the coupling state of MC1-R to intracellular output signals in human fat cells and tissue. Expression of MC1-R by undifferentiated and differentiated MSCs was quantified by real-time TaqMan PCR. Intracellular output signals (cAMP, lipolysis, secretion of IL-6, IL-10, and TNF-α), as well as effects on the metabolic rate and proliferation of human MSCs were analyzed by standard assays, exposing undifferentiated and differentiated MSCs and, in part, human adipose tissue explants to the potent MC1-R agonist, [Nle4, D-Phe7]-α -MSH (NDP-MSH). This agonist induced a weak cAMP signal in MSC-derived adipocytes. However, it did not affect lipolysis in these cells or in adipose tissue explants, nor did it modulate cytokine release and mRNA expression of IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α upon LPS stimulation. In undifferentiated MSCs, NDP-MSH did not alter the metabolic rate, but it showed a significant antiproliferative effect. Therefore, it appears that MC1-R–effector coupling in (differentiated) human adipocytes is too weak to induce a regulatory effect on lipolysis or inflammation; by contrast, MC1-R stimulation in undifferentiated MSCs induces an inhibitory signal on cell proliferation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Alessandra Braccini and Nunzia Di Maggio of the Department of Surgery for providing the human MSCs. This project was supported by the Hirzbrunnen-Stiftung, Basel, by the Novartis Foundation for Biomedical Research, Basel, and by a University Children's Hospital Basel (UKBB) research grant.

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