The Multifaceted Haptoglobin in the Context of Adipose Tissue and Metabolism

Obesity is a low chronic inflammatory state because several inflammatory factors are increased in obese subjects, this having important implications for the onset of obesity-associated complications. The source of most of these inflammatory molecules is white adipose tissue (WAT), which upon excessi...

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Published inEndocrine reviews Vol. 37; no. 4; pp. 403 - 416
Main Authors Maffei, Margherita, Barone, Ilaria, Scabia, Gaia, Santini, Ferruccio
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Oxford University Press 01.08.2016
Copyright by The Endocrine Society
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Summary:Obesity is a low chronic inflammatory state because several inflammatory factors are increased in obese subjects, this having important implications for the onset of obesity-associated complications. The source of most of these inflammatory molecules is white adipose tissue (WAT), which upon excessive weight gain, becomes infiltrated with macrophages and lymphocytes and undergoes important changes in its gene expression. Haptoglobin (Hp), a typical marker of inflammation in clinical practice, main carrier of free hemoglobin, and long known to be part of the hepatic acute phase response, perfectly sits in the intersection between obesity and inflammation: it is expressed by adipocytes and its abundance in WAT and in plasma positively relates to the degree of adiposity. In the present review, we will analyze causes and consequences of Hp expression and regulation in WAT and how these relate to the obesity/inflammation paradigm and comorbidities.
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ISSN:0163-769X
1945-7189
1945-7189
DOI:10.1210/er.2016-1009