Adipose tissue lipolysis is the process by which triglycerides in lipid stores are hydrolyzed into free fatty acids (FFAs), serving as fuel during fasting or cold-induced thermogenesis. Although cytosolic lipases are considered the predominant mechanism of liberating FFAs, lipolysis also occurs in lysosomes via lysosomal acid lipase (LIPA), albeit with unclear roles in lipid storage and whole-body metabolism. We found that adipocyte LIPA expression increased in adipose tissue of mice when lipolysis was stimulated during fasting, cold exposure, or β-adrenergic agonism. This was functionally important, as inhibition of LIPA genetically or pharmacologically resulted in lower plasma FFAs under lipolytic conditions. Furthermore, adipocyte LIPA deficiency impaired thermogenesis and oxygen consumption and rendered mice susceptible to diet-induced obesity. Importantly, lysosomal lipolysis was independent of adipose triglyceride lipase, the rate-limiting enzyme of cytosolic lipolysis. Our data suggest a significant role for LIPA and lysosomal lipolysis in adipocyte lipid metabolism beyond classical cytosolic lipolysis.
Yu-Sheng Yeh, Trent D. Evans, Mari Iwase, Se-Jin Jeong, Xiangyu Zhang, Ziyang Liu, Arick Park, Ali Ghasemian, Borna Dianati, Ali Javaheri, Dagmar Kratky, Satoko Kawarasaki, Tsuyoshi Goto, Hanrui Zhang, Partha Dutta, Francisco J. Schopfer, Adam C. Straub, Jaehyung Cho, Irfan J. Lodhi, Babak Razani
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