posted on 2024-12-07, 14:35authored byKyungwon Ko, Sarith R. Bandara, Weinan Zhou, Leo Svenningsson, Marilyn Porras-Gómez, Nurila Kambar, Julia Dreher-Threlkeld, Daniel Topgaard, Diego Hernández-Saavedra, Sayeepriyadarshini Anakk, Cecília Leal
Adipose-derived lipid droplets (LDs) are rich in triacylglycerols
(TAGs), which regulate essential cellular processes, such as energy
storage. Although TAG accumulation and LD expansion in adipocytes
occur during obesity, how LDs dynamically package TAGs in response
to excessive nutrients remains elusive. Here, we found that LD lipidomes
display a remarkable increase in TAG acyl chain saturation under calorie-dense
diets, turning them conducive to close-packing. Using high-resolution
X-ray diffraction, solid-state NMR, and imaging, we show that beyond
size expansion LDs from mice under varied obesogenic diets govern
fat accumulation by packing TAGs in different crystalline polymorphs.
Consistently, LDs and tissue stiffen for high-calorie-fed mice with
more than a 2-fold increase in elastic moduli compared to normal diet.
Our data suggest that in addition to expanding, adipocyte LDs undergo
structural remodeling by close-packing rigid and highly saturated
TAGs in response to caloric overload, as opposed to liquid TAGs in
a low-calorie diet. This work provides insights into how lipid packing
within LDs can allow for the rapid and optimal expansion of fat during
the initial stages of obesity.