Original Article

Obesity (2007) 15, 2225–2232; doi: 10.1038/oby.2007.264

Visceral Adiposity Is Associated with Serum Retinol Binding Protein-4 Levels in Healthy Women*

Ji-Won Lee*, Jee-Aee Im, Hye-Ree Lee*, Jae-Yong Shim*, Byung-S. Youn,§ and Duk-Chul Lee*

  1. *Department of Family Medicine, Yonsei University, College of Medicine, Yongdong Severance Hospital, Seoul, Korea
  2. Department of Laboratory Medicine, MizMedi Hospital, Seoul, Korea
  3. AdipoGen, Inc., College of Life Science and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul, Korea
  4. §Immunomodulation Research Center, University of Ulsan, Ulsan, Korea

Correspondence: Duk-Chul Lee Department of Family Medicine, Yonsei University, College of Medicine, Yong-dong Severance Hospital, Kangnam P.O. Box 1217, Seoul, Korea. E-mail: faith@yumc.yonsei.ac.kr

*The costs of publication of this article were defrayed, in part, by the payment of page charges. This article must, therefore, be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Received 5 June 2006; Revised  0000; Accepted 29 January 2007.

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Abstract

Objective: Retinol binding protein-4 (RBP4) has been reported to impair insulin sensitivity throughout the body. We investigated the relationship between serum RBP4 levels and adiposity indices as well as metabolic risk variables.

Research Methods and Procedure: We recruited a total of 102 healthy women 21 to 67 years old. We assessed body composition by computed tomography and divided the study population into four groups based on body weight and visceral fat area (non-obese without visceral adiposity, non-obese with visceral adiposity, obese without visceral adiposity, and obese with visceral adiposity). Serum RBP4 levels were measured by radioimmunoassay.

Results: Despite similar levels of total body fat, non-obese women had lower systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, triglyceride (TG), low-density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol levels, insulin resistance indices, and RBP4 levels than non-obese women with visceral adiposity and had higher high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels. Similarly, obese women without visceral adiposity had lower blood pressure, total cholesterol, TG levels, insulin resistance indices, and RBP4 levels than obese women with visceral adiposity. In addition, despite having increased body fat, obese women without visceral adiposity had lower TGs, insulin resistance indices, and serum RBP4 levels than non-obese women with visceral adiposity. By step-wise multiple regression analysis, visceral fat areas and LDL-cholesterol levels independently affected RBP4 levels.

Discussion: We determined that serum RBP4 levels are independently associated with visceral fat and LDL-cholesterol levels. These results suggest that, irrespective of body weight, visceral obesity is an independent predictor of serum RBP4 levels, and RBP4 may represent a link between visceral obesity and cardiovascular disease.

Keywords:

visceral obesity, insulin resistance, adipokines, cardiovascular disease

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