Superstable lipid vacuoles endow cartilage with its shape and biomechanics.

Journal: Science (New York, N.Y.)
Published:
Abstract

Conventionally, the size, shape, and biomechanics of cartilages are determined by their voluminous extracellular matrix. By contrast, we found that multiple murine cartilages consist of lipid-filled cells called lipochondrocytes. Despite resembling adipocytes, lipochondrocytes were molecularly distinct and produced lipids exclusively through de novo lipogenesis. Consequently, lipochondrocytes grew uniform lipid droplets that resisted systemic lipid surges and did not enlarge upon obesity. Lipochondrocytes also lacked lipid mobilization factors, which enabled exceptional vacuole stability and protected cartilage from shrinking upon starvation. Lipid droplets modulated lipocartilage biomechanics by decreasing the tissue's stiffness, strength, and resilience. Lipochondrocytes were found in multiple mammals, including humans, but not in nonmammalian tetrapods. Thus, analogous to bubble wrap, superstable lipid vacuoles confer skeletal tissue with cartilage-like properties without "packing foam-like" extracellular matrix.

Authors
Raul Ramos, Kim Pham, Richard Prince, Leith Leiser Miller, Maneeshi Prasad, Xiaojie Wang, Rachel Nordberg, Benjamin Bielajew, Jerry Hu, Kosuke Yamaga, Ji Oh, Tao Peng, Rupsa Datta, Aksana Astrowskaja, Axel Almet, John Burns, Yuchen Liu, Christian Guerrero Juarez, Bryant Tran, Yi-lin Chu, Anh Nguyen, Tsai-ching Hsi, Norman Lim, Sandra Schoeniger, Ruiqi Liu, Yun-ling Pai, Chella Vadivel, Sandy Ingleby, Andrew Mckechnie, Frank Van Breukelen, Kyle Hoehn, John Rasweiler, Michinori Kohara, William Loughry, Scott Weldy, Raymond Cosper, Chao-chun Yang, Sung-jan Lin, Kimberly Cooper, Sharlene Santana, Jeffrey Bradley, Michael Kiebish, Michelle Digman, David James, Amy Merrill, Qing Nie, Thomas Schilling, Aliaksandr Astrowski, Eric Potma, Martín García Castro, Kyriacos Athanasiou, Richard Behringer, Maksim Plikus
Relevant Conditions

Obesity