Karagiannides Iordanes, Pothoulakis Charalabos
Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, Division of Digestive Diseases, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California 90095-7019, USA.
Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes. 2009 Feb;16(1):47-52. doi: 10.1097/MED.0b013e328321306c.
The purpose of this review is to present recent data on the effects of substance P on the development of two common pathological conditions, namely obesity and gut inflammation, and elucidate the role of this neuropeptide as a potential regulator between increased adiposity and exacerbated inflammatory responses during inflammatory bowel disease.
We present data that demonstrate a role for substance P in both obesity and inflammatory bowel disease and investigate potential effects on fat tissue that may influence the progression of intestinal inflammation. More specifically, we discuss new evidence for direct effects of substance P on fat tissue that determine fat depot size and overall weight in mice and analyze some of the potential mechanisms. Furthermore, we present data that describe changes in the intestinal sensory innervation, in particular substance P-positive innervation, during gut inflammation and new direct evidence of the effects of preestablished obesity in the outcome of experimental inflammation of the colon in mice. In the end we propose a link between the role of substance P in the promotion of obesity and the potential consequences on inflammatory bowel disease.
We propose that substance P may promote fat tissue expansion either centrally or peripherally and thus create a proinflammatory environment (as is the case with obesity) which may in turn affect the progression (exacerbate) of gut inflammation. Further studies are required on the effects of 'creeping fat' in inflammatory bowel disease in order to decipher the role of this type of fat-depot expansion in the development of the disease.
本综述旨在展示近期关于P物质对两种常见病理状况(即肥胖和肠道炎症)发展影响的数据,并阐明这种神经肽作为炎症性肠病期间肥胖增加与炎症反应加剧之间潜在调节因子的作用。
我们展示的数据表明P物质在肥胖和炎症性肠病中均发挥作用,并研究其对脂肪组织的潜在影响,这种影响可能会影响肠道炎症的进展。更具体地说,我们讨论了P物质对脂肪组织产生直接影响的新证据,这些影响决定了小鼠脂肪储存的大小和总体重量,并分析了一些潜在机制。此外,我们展示了描述肠道炎症期间肠道感觉神经支配变化的数据,特别是P物质阳性神经支配的变化,以及预先存在的肥胖对小鼠结肠实验性炎症结果影响的新直接证据。最后,我们提出了P物质在促进肥胖中的作用与对炎症性肠病潜在后果之间的联系。
我们提出,P物质可能在中枢或外周促进脂肪组织扩张,从而营造促炎环境(如肥胖时的情况),这反过来可能会影响肠道炎症的进展(加剧)。为了阐明这种类型的脂肪储存扩张在疾病发展中的作用,需要进一步研究“爬行脂肪”在炎症性肠病中的影响。