Menegati Laura Machado, de Oliveira Erick Esteves, Oliveira Bernardo de Castro, Macedo Gilson Costa, de Castro E Silva Flávia Márcia
Faculdade de Medicina, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Saúde, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora, MG, Brazil.
Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biologia Departamento de Parasitologia, Microbiologia e Imunologia, Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora MG, Brazil.
Immunol Lett. 2023 Mar;255:10-20. doi: 10.1016/j.imlet.2023.01.004. Epub 2023 Jan 14.
Obesity and allergic asthma are inflammatory chronic diseases mediated by distinct immunological features, obesity presents a Th1/Th17 profile, asthma is commonly associated with Th2 response. However, when combined, they result in more severe asthma symptoms, greater frequency of exacerbation episodes, and lower therapy responsiveness. These features lead to decreased life quality, associated with higher morbidity/mortality rates. In addition, obesity prompts specific asthma phenotypes, which can be dependent on atopic status, age, and gender. In adults, obesity is associated with neutrophilic/Th17 profile, while in children, the outcome is diverse, in some cases children with obesity present aggravation of atopy, and Th2 inflammation, and in others an association with a Th1 profile, with reduced IgE levels and eosinophilia. These alterations occur due to a complex group of factors among which the microbiome has been recently explored. Particularly, evidence shows its important role in susceptibility or resistance to asthma development, via gut-lung-axis, and demonstrates its relevance to the immune pathogenesis of the syndrome. Few studies address the relevance of the lung microbiome in shaping the immune response, locally. However, specific bacteria, like Moraxella catarrhalis, Haemophilus influenza, and Streptococcus pneumoniae, correlate with important features of the obese-asthmatic phenotype. Although maternal obesity is known to increase asthma risk in offspring, the impact on lung colonization is unknown. This review details the main key immune mechanisms involved in obesity-aggravated asthma, featuring the effect of maternal obesity in the establishment of gut and lung microbiota of the offspring, acting as potential childhood asthma inducer.
肥胖和过敏性哮喘是由不同免疫特征介导的炎症性慢性疾病,肥胖呈现Th1/Th17特征,哮喘通常与Th2反应相关。然而,当两者合并时,会导致更严重的哮喘症状、更频繁的发作以及更低的治疗反应性。这些特征导致生活质量下降,并伴有更高的发病率/死亡率。此外,肥胖会引发特定的哮喘表型,这可能取决于特应性状态、年龄和性别。在成年人中,肥胖与嗜中性粒细胞/Th17特征相关,而在儿童中,结果则多种多样,在某些情况下,肥胖儿童会出现特应性加重和Th2炎症,而在其他情况下,则与Th1特征相关,IgE水平降低且嗜酸性粒细胞增多。这些改变是由一组复杂的因素引起的,其中微生物群最近受到了研究。特别是,有证据表明其通过肠-肺轴在哮喘易感性或抗性中发挥重要作用,并证明其与该综合征的免疫发病机制相关。很少有研究探讨肺微生物群在局部塑造免疫反应中的相关性。然而,特定细菌,如卡他莫拉菌、流感嗜血杆菌和肺炎链球菌,与肥胖-哮喘表型的重要特征相关。虽然已知母亲肥胖会增加后代患哮喘的风险,但对肺部定植的影响尚不清楚。本综述详细介绍了肥胖加重型哮喘中涉及的主要关键免疫机制,重点介绍了母亲肥胖对后代肠道和肺部微生物群建立的影响,其可作为儿童哮喘的潜在诱因。