脂肪组织
肥胖
炎症
主要组织相容性复合体
内分泌学
生物
生物信息学
免疫学
医学
免疫系统
作者
Tuo Deng,Christopher J. Lyon,Laurie J. Minze,Jianxin Lin,Jia Zou,Joey Z. Liu,Yuelan Ren,Zheng Yin,Dale J. Hamilton,Patrick R. Reardon,Vadim Sherman,Helen Y. Wang,Kevin J. Phillips,Paul Webb,Stephen T.C. Wong,Rong‐Fu Wang,Willa A. Hsueh
出处
期刊:Cell Metabolism
[Cell Press]
日期:2013-03-01
卷期号:17 (3): 411-422
被引量:351
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cmet.2013.02.009
摘要
Summary
Adipose-resident T cells (ARTs) regulate metabolic and inflammatory responses in obesity, but ART activation signals are poorly understood. Here, we describe class II major histocompatibility complex (MHCII) as an important component of high-fat-diet (HFD)-induced obesity. Microarray analysis of primary adipocytes revealed that multiple genes involved in MHCII antigen processing and presentation increased in obese women. In mice, adipocyte MHCII increased within 2 weeks on HFD, paralleling increases in proinflammatory ART markers and decreases in anti-inflammatory ART markers, and preceding adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) accumulation and proinflammatory M1 polarization. Mouse 3T3-L1 and primary adipocytes activated T cells in an antigen-specific, contact-dependent manner, indicating that adipocyte MHCII is functional. HFD-fed MHCII−/− mice developed less adipose inflammation and insulin resistance than did wild-type mice, despite developing similar adiposity. These investigations uncover a mechanism whereby a HFD-induced adipocyte/ART dialog involving MHCII instigates adipose inflammation and, together with ATM MHCII, escalates its progression.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI