Aging is widely regarded as an irreversible arrest of cellular growth and proliferation, often accompanied by systemic metabolic organ abnormalities, ultimately reducing quality of life and increasing mortality in the elderly. Multi-organ transcriptomic analyses suggest that adipose tissue is among the earliest organs to respond to aging, characterized by changes in fat content and redistribution of adipose tissue, decline in thermogenic adipose function, reduced proliferation and differentiation capacity of adipose progenitor and stem cells, accumulation of senescent cells, and immunosenescence. These alterations may act synergistically and play a role in abnormalities in metabolic organs including the cardiovascular, liver, skeletal muscle, and brain. Studies have demonstrated that exercise ameliorates the effects of adipose tissue aging on metabolic organ abnormalities by inhibiting inflammation, reducing the accumulation of ectopic lipids, enhancing the browning of white adipose tissue and thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue, improving lipid metabolism, regulating the secretion of adipokines, and mitigating immunosenescence. This review summarizes the main characteristics of adipose tissue aging, the effects of adipose tissue aging on metabolic organ abnormalities, and the potential mechanisms by which exercise ameliorates the effects of adipose tissue aging on metabolic organ abnormalities. It provides theoretical support for basic and clinical research on exercise-based prevention and treatment of aging-related diseases.
Tang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.