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Subcutaneous Transplantation of White Adipose Tissue

2023
In the research setting, white adipose tissue (WAT) transplantation, also known as fat transplantation, is often used to understand the physiological function of adipocytes or associated stromal vascular cells such as macrophages in the context of local and systemic metabolism.
Yu-Sheng, Yeh   +8 more
openaire   +2 more sources

White adipose tissue mitochondrial metabolism in health and in obesity

Obesity Reviews, 2019
White adipose tissue is one of the largest organs of the body. It plays a key role in whole‐body energy status and metabolism; it not only stores excess energy but also secretes various hormones and metabolites to regulate body energy balance.
S. Heinonen   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sensory innervation of white adipose tissue

American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 1987
The presumption that sensory information does not arise from white adipose tissue was reevaluated using the neuroanatomical tracer, "true blue." Fluorescent cell bodies were observed in dorsal root ganglia of rats after tracer was implanted into inguinal or dorsal subcutaneous fat depots.
R B, Fishman, J, Dark
openaire   +2 more sources

White Adipose Tissue

2011
White adipose tissue (WAT) is one of the most abundant tissues in mammals, exhibiting numerous complex functions. The primary purpose of WAT is to store excess energy in the form of fat for future use by other cells of the organism during periods of energy deprivation.
Stephane Gesta, C. Ronald Kahn
openaire   +1 more source

White Adipose Tissue

2010
Adipose tissue exist in two different forms which can be distinguished with the free eye by their color: white adipose tissue and brown adipose tissue. Both have a highly differing fine structure. Furthermore, their location differs significantly. White adipose tissue is found in the subcutaneous tissue where it exists mainly as single adipocytes or in
Margit Pavelka, Jürgen Roth
openaire   +1 more source

Hexokinase of white adipose tissue

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Specialized Section on Enzymological Subjects, 1963
Abstract Apparent Michaelis constants for glucose and fructose of white adipose tissue hexokinase have been estimated by determining the rate of hexose C-1 oxidation through the hexose monophosphate shunt with added glucose-6- P dehydrogenase and NADP + . The values obtained are: fructose, 3 mM; glucose, 0.07 mM.
openaire   +2 more sources

Circadian rhythms in white adipose tissue

2012
Adipose tissue is an important endocrine organ. It is involved in the regulation of energy metabolism by secreting factors (adipokines) that regulate appetite, food intake, glucose disposal, and energy expenditure. Many of these adipokines display profound day/night rhythms, and accumulating evidence links disruption of these rhythms to metabolic ...
Van der Spek, R.   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

White adipose tissue and cardiovascular disease

Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 2005
Adipocytes have recently been shown to secrete a variety of bioactive substances called 'adipocytokines', and have been recognized as endocrine cells. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alphaalpha, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and heparin-binding epidermal-growth-factor-like growth factor (HBEGF) are among these adipocytokines, and they ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Explant Cultures of White Adipose Tissue

2008
Obesity is characterized by increased adiposity of visceral and subcutaneous depots as well as other organs, including the vasculature. These fat depots secrete various hormone-like proteins implicated in metabolic homeostasis (e.g., adiponectin, resistin), the central control of appetite (e.g., leptin) and the increased production of cytokines.
Sébastien, Thalmann   +2 more
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Sandwiched White Adipose Tissue: A Microphysiological System of Primary Human Adipose Tissue

Tissue Engineering Part C: Methods, 2018
White adipose tissue (WAT) is a critical organ in both health and disease. However, physiologically faithful tissue culture models of primary human WAT remain limited, at best. In this study we describe a novel WAT culture system in which primary human WAT is sandwiched between tissue-engineered sheets of adipose-derived stromal cells.
Frank H, Lau   +12 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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