Radigan Kathryn A, Morales-Nebreda Luisa, Soberanes Saul, Nicholson Trevor, Nigdelioglu Recep, Cho Takugo, Chi Monica, Hamanaka Robert B, Misharin Alexander V, Perlman Harris, Budinger G R Scott, Mutlu Gökhan M
Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 18;9(9):e108138. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108138. eCollection 2014.
During the recent H1N1 outbreak, obese patients had worsened lung injury and increased mortality. We used a murine model of influenza A pneumonia to test the hypothesis that leptin receptor deficiency might explain the enhanced mortality in obese patients.
We infected wild-type, obese mice globally deficient in the leptin receptor (db/db) and non-obese mice with tissue specific deletion of the leptin receptor in the lung epithelium (SPC-Cre/LepR fl/fl) or macrophages and alveolar type II cells (LysM-Cre/Lepr fl/fl) with influenza A virus (A/WSN/33 [H1N1]) (500 and 1500 pfu/mouse) and measured mortality, viral clearance and several markers of lung injury severity.
The clearance of influenza A virus from the lungs of mice was impaired in obese mice globally deficient in the leptin receptor (db/db) compared to normal weight wild-type mice. In contrast, non-obese, SP-C-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl and LysM-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl had improved viral clearance after influenza A infection. In obese mice, mortality was increased compared with wild-type mice, while the SP-C-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl and LysM-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl mice exhibited improved survival.
Global loss of the leptin receptor results in reduced viral clearance and worse outcomes following influenza A infection. These findings are not the result of the loss of leptin signaling in lung epithelial cells or macrophages. Our results suggest that factors associated with obesity or with leptin signaling in non-myeloid populations such as natural killer and T cells may be associated with worsened outcomes following influenza A infection.
在近期的甲型H1N1流感爆发期间,肥胖患者的肺损伤加重且死亡率增加。我们使用甲型流感肺炎小鼠模型来检验瘦素受体缺乏可能解释肥胖患者死亡率增加这一假说。
我们用甲型流感病毒(A/WSN/33 [H1N1])(500和1500 pfu/小鼠)感染瘦素受体完全缺乏的野生型肥胖小鼠(db/db)以及肺上皮细胞(SPC-Cre/LepR fl/fl)或巨噬细胞和II型肺泡细胞(LysM-Cre/Lepr fl/fl)中瘦素受体组织特异性缺失的非肥胖小鼠,并测量死亡率、病毒清除率以及肺损伤严重程度的几个标志物。
与正常体重的野生型小鼠相比,瘦素受体完全缺乏的肥胖小鼠(db/db)肺部甲型流感病毒的清除受损。相比之下,非肥胖的SP-C-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl和LysM-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl小鼠在感染甲型流感后病毒清除有所改善。在肥胖小鼠中,与野生型小鼠相比死亡率增加,而SP-C-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl和LysM-Cre+/+/LepR fl/fl小鼠的存活率有所提高。
瘦素受体的整体缺失导致甲型流感病毒感染后病毒清除减少和预后更差。这些发现并非肺上皮细胞或巨噬细胞中瘦素信号缺失的结果。我们的结果表明,与肥胖相关的因素或自然杀伤细胞和T细胞等非髓系群体中与瘦素信号相关的因素可能与甲型流感病毒感染后预后恶化有关。