Journal of Lipid Research (Oct 1991)
Regional variation in adipose tissue lipolysis in lean and obese men.
Abstract
Biopsies of adipose tissue were obtained from two subcutaneous regions (abdominal and femoral) in a sample of 54 men (32 obese and 22 lean subjects). Clonidine-induced antilipolysis in femoral adipose cells was similar in both groups, whereas subcutaneous abdominal adipocytes of obese individuals showed a higher alpha 2-adrenergic response than did subcutaneous abdominal adipose cells from lean subjects. In addition, epinephrine had a biphasic effect in subcutaneous abdominal adipocytes from obese individuals, as it induced antilipolysis at low concentrations, and a net lipolytic response at higher doses. In contrast, the physiological amine promoted lipolysis in subcutaneous abdominal adipose cells of lean subjects. Epinephrine- and clonidine-induced antilipolysis of subcutaneous abdominal adipocytes was positively associated with the level of subcutaneous abdominal fat measured by computed tomography (CT). Finally, men with a high alpha 2-adrenergic response of subcutaneous abdominal fat cells were fatter than those with a low alpha 2-adrenergic component. These results suggest that, in men with a wide range of body fatness, variations in the lipolytic response of subcutaneous abdominal adipose cells to epinephrine appear to involve changes in the functional balance between alpha 2- and beta-adrenoceptors.