Bioengineering (Dec 2024)

Mechanical Stretch Control of Adipocyte AKT Signaling and the Role of FAK and ROCK Mechanosensors

  • Tasneem Bouzid,
  • Eunju Kim,
  • Brandon D. Riehl,
  • Ruiguo Yang,
  • Viswanathan Saraswathi,
  • Jason K. Kim,
  • Jung Yul Lim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering11121279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 1279

Abstract

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Adipose tissue in vivo is physiologically exposed to compound mechanical loading due to bodyweight bearing, posture, and motion. The capability of adipocytes to sense and respond to mechanical loading milieus to influence metabolic functions may provide a new insight into obesity and metabolic diseases such as type 2 diabetes (T2D). Here, we evidenced physiological mechanical loading control of adipocyte insulin signaling cascades. We exposed differentiated 3T3-L1 adipocytes to mechanical stretching and assessed key markers of insulin signaling, AKT activation, and GLUT4 translocation, required for glucose uptake. We showed that cyclic stretch loading at 5% strain and 1 Hz frequency increases AKT phosphorylation and GLUT4 translocation to the plasma membrane by approximately two-fold increases compared to unstretched controls for both markers as assessed by immunoblotting (p p < 0.001). This suggests the regulatory role of focal adhesion and cytoskeletal mechanosensing in adipocyte insulin signaling under stretch loading. Our finding on the impact of mechanical stretch loading on key insulin signaling effectors in differentiated adipocytes and the mediatory role of focal adhesion and cytoskeleton mechanosensors is the first of its kind to our knowledge. This may suggest a therapeutic potential of mechanical loading cue in improving conditions of obesity and T2D. For instance, cyclic mechanical stretch loading of adipose tissue could be explored as a tool to improve insulin sensitivity in patients with obesity and T2D, and the mediatory mechanosensors such as FAK and ROCK may be targeted to further invigorate stretch-induced insulin signaling activation.

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