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肥胖导致黏膜相关不变 T 细胞减少的性别差异。

Sex discrepancy in the reduction of mucosal-associated invariant T cells caused by obesity.

机构信息

Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.

Department of Global Health, Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.

出版信息

Immun Inflamm Dis. 2021 Mar;9(1):299-309. doi: 10.1002/iid3.393. Epub 2020 Dec 17.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Gut microbiota has been reported to contribute to obesity and the pathology of obesity-related diseases but the underlying mechanisms are largely unknown. Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are a unique subpopulation of T cells characterized by the expression of a semi-invariant T cell receptor (TCR) α chain (Vα19 in mice; Vα7.2 in humans). The expansion and maturation of MAIT cells require the gut microbiota and antigen-presenting molecule MR1, suggesting that MAIT cells may play a unique role in bridging gut microbiota, obesity, and obesity-associated inflammation.

METHODS

The levels of human MAIT cells from obese patients, as well as mouse MAIT cells from obese mouse models, were determined by flow cytometry. By comparing to controls, we analyzed the change of MAIT cells in obese subjects.

RESULTS

We found obese patients had fewer circulating MAIT cells than healthy-weight donors and the difference was more distinct in male patients. Consistently, male mice (but not female mice) have shown reduced MAIT cells in the liver and adipose tissue after a 10-week Western diet compared to mice on a control diet. We also explored the possibility of utilizing high-throughput technology (i.e., quantitative polymerase chain reaction [qPCR]), other than flow cytometry, to determine the expression levels of the invariant TCR of human MAIT cells. But a minimal correlation (R  = 0.23, p = .11) was observed between qPCR and flow cytometry data.

CONCLUSION

Our study suggests that there is a sex discrepancy in the impact of obesity on MAIT cells: MAIT cells in male (but not female) humans and male mice are reduced by obesity.

摘要

简介

肠道微生物群已被报道有助于肥胖和肥胖相关疾病的发病机制,但其中的潜在机制在很大程度上尚不清楚。黏膜相关不变 T(MAIT)细胞是一种独特的 T 细胞亚群,其特征是表达半不变 T 细胞受体(TCR)α链(在小鼠中为 Vα19;在人类中为 Vα7.2)。MAIT 细胞的扩增和成熟需要肠道微生物群和抗原呈递分子 MR1,这表明 MAIT 细胞可能在连接肠道微生物群、肥胖和肥胖相关炎症方面发挥独特作用。

方法

通过流式细胞术测定肥胖患者的人 MAIT 细胞水平以及肥胖小鼠模型中的鼠 MAIT 细胞水平。通过与对照组比较,我们分析了肥胖患者中 MAIT 细胞的变化。

结果

我们发现肥胖患者的循环 MAIT 细胞数量少于健康体重供体,且男性患者的差异更为明显。同样,与对照组饮食相比,10 周的西方饮食使雄性(而非雌性)小鼠的肝脏和脂肪组织中的 MAIT 细胞减少。我们还探索了利用高通量技术(即定量聚合酶链反应(qPCR))代替流式细胞术来确定人 MAIT 细胞不变 TCR 的表达水平的可能性。但 qPCR 和流式细胞术数据之间仅观察到最小的相关性(R=0.23,p=0.11)。

结论

我们的研究表明,肥胖对 MAIT 细胞的影响存在性别差异:肥胖会减少男性(而非女性)人类和雄性小鼠中的 MAIT 细胞。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/fc4f/7860596/d839299a4dff/IID3-9-299-g001.jpg

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