Increased Energy Expenditure, Dietary Fat Wasting, and Resistance to Diet-Induced Obesity in Mice Lacking Renin

An overactive renin-angiotensin system is associated with obesity and the metabolic syndrome. However, the mechanisms behind it are unclear. Cleaving angiotensinogen to angiotensin I by renin is a rate-limiting step of angiotensin II production, but renin is suggested to have angiotensin-independent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell metabolism 2007-12, Vol.6 (6), p.506-512
Hauptverfasser: Takahashi, Nobuyuki, Li, Feng, Hua, Kunjie, Deng, Jianbei, Wang, Chih-Hong, Bowers, Robert R., Bartness, Timothy J., Kim, Hyung-Suk, Harp, Joyce B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:An overactive renin-angiotensin system is associated with obesity and the metabolic syndrome. However, the mechanisms behind it are unclear. Cleaving angiotensinogen to angiotensin I by renin is a rate-limiting step of angiotensin II production, but renin is suggested to have angiotensin-independent effects. We generated mice lacking renin ( Ren1c) using embryonic stem cells from C57BL/6 mice, a strain prone to diet-induced obesity. Ren1c −/− mice are lean, insulin sensitive, and resistant to diet-induced obesity without changes in food intake and physical activity. The lean phenotype is likely due to a higher metabolic rate and gastrointestinal loss of dietary fat. Most of the metabolic changes in Ren1c −/− mice were reversed by angiotensin II administration. These results support a role for angiotensin II in the pathogenesis of diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance.
ISSN:1550-4131
1932-7420
DOI:10.1016/j.cmet.2007.10.011