Higher blood fats make cells share stress

Increased levels of blood fats in people with type 2 diabetes are more harmful than assumed

05-Apr-2022 - Germany

In patients with metabolic diseases, elevated fat levels in the blood create stress in muscle cells - a reaction to changes outside the cell which damage their structure and function. An international research team led by the University of Leeds and with participation by the University of Bonn has discovered that these stressed-out cells give off a signal which can be passed on to other cells. The signals, known as ceramides, may have a protective benefit in the short-term, because they are part of a mechanism designed to reduce stress in the cell. But in metabolic diseases, which are long term conditions, the signals can kill the cells, make symptoms more severe, and worsen the illness. The study has been published in the journal Nature Communications.

© Lee Roberts

Microscopy image showing human muscle cells with nuclei in blue, and stress caused by the ceramide stress signals shown in red.

Increased fat in the blood has long been known to damage tissues and organs, contributing to the development of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases including type 2 diabetes. The condition can be caused by obesity, rates of which have nearly tripled worldwide since 1975. In 2016, there were more than 650 million adults aged 18 and above with obesity.

In the lab, the research team replicated the blood fat levels observed in humans with metabolic disease by exposing skeletal muscle cells to a fatty acid called palmitate. The cells began to transmit the ceramide signal. When these cells were mixed with others which had not been previously exposed to fats, the researchers found that they communicated with each other, transporting the signal in packages called extracellular vesicles.

The experiment was reproduced in human volunteers with metabolic diseases and gave comparable results. “The findings provide a completely new angle on how cells respond to stress, with important consequences for our understanding of certain metabolic diseases including obesity,” said Dr. Reinhard Bauer of the Life & Medical Sciences Institute (LIMES) at the University of Bonn. He is a member of the Transdisciplinary Research Area "Life and Health”.

Novel perspective on cell stress

His research group works with a mouse model in which ceramide signaling is greatly reduced due to a mutation. When the skeletal muscle cells of the mice were stressed with the palmitic acid, the ceramide signal could no longer be generated and transported into neighboring cells. Thus, the researchers were able to combine and verify data from both the cell-based and human studies.

Research supervisor Lee Roberts, Professor of Molecular Physiology and Metabolism in the University of Leeds’s School of Medicine, said: “Although this research is at an early stage, our discovery may form the basis of new therapies or therapeutic approaches to prevent the development of cardiovascular and metabolic diseases such as diabetes in people with elevated blood fats in obesity.”

“This research gives us a novel perspective on how stress develops in the cells of individuals with obesity, and provides new pathways to consider when looking to develop new treatments for metabolic diseases,” said Lea Hänschke, a doctoral student at the LIMES Institute at the University of Bonn. This is highly relevant since obesity is an ever-increasing epidemic and the burden of associated chronic disease such as type 2 diabetes necessitates new treatments.

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