Suppr超能文献

饮食诱导肥胖小鼠中性别依赖性 T 细胞失调。

Sex-Dependent T Cell Dysregulation in Mice with Diet-Induced Obesity.

机构信息

Department of Internal Medicine III, Hematology and Oncology, University Hospital Regensburg, Franz-Josef-Strauß Allee 11, 93053 Regensburg, Germany.

Bavarian Cancer Research Centre (BZKF), 93053 Regensburg, Germany.

出版信息

Int J Mol Sci. 2024 Jul 28;25(15):8234. doi: 10.3390/ijms25158234.

Abstract

Obesity is an emerging public health problem. Chronic low-grade inflammation is considered a major promotor of obesity-induced secondary diseases such as cardiovascular and fatty liver disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and several cancer entities. Most preliminary studies on obesity-induced immune responses have been conducted in male rodents. Sex-specific differences between men and women in obesity-induced immune dysregulation have not yet been fully outlined but are highly relevant to optimizing prevention strategies for overweight-associated complications. In this study, we fed C57BL/6 female vs. male mice with either standard chow or an obesity-inducing diet (OD). Blood and spleen immune cells were isolated and analyzed by flow cytometry. Lean control mice showed no sex bias in systemic and splenic immune cell composition, whereas the immune responses to obesity were significantly distinct between female and male mice. While immune cell alterations in male OD mice were characterized by a significant reduction in T cells and an increase in myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC), female OD mice displayed preserved T cell numbers. The sex-dependent differences in obesity-induced T cell dysregulation were associated with varying susceptibility to body weight gain and fatty liver disease: Male mice showed significantly more hepatic inflammation and histopathological stigmata of fatty liver in comparison to female OD mice. Our findings indicate that sex impacts susceptibility to obesity-induced T cell dysregulation, which might explain sex-dependent different incidences in the development of obesity-associated secondary diseases. These results provide novel insights into the understanding of obesity-induced chronic inflammation from a sex-specific perspective. Given that most nutrition, exercise, and therapeutic recommendations for the prevention of obesity-associated comorbidities do not differentiate between men and women, the data of this study are clinically relevant and should be taken into consideration in future trials and treatment strategies.

摘要

肥胖是一个新出现的公共卫生问题。慢性低度炎症被认为是肥胖引起的继发性疾病的主要促进因素,如心血管疾病和脂肪肝、2 型糖尿病和几种癌症实体。大多数关于肥胖引起的免疫反应的初步研究都是在雄性啮齿动物中进行的。肥胖引起的免疫失调在男性和女性之间的性别特异性差异尚未得到充分描述,但与优化超重相关并发症的预防策略密切相关。在这项研究中,我们用标准饮食或肥胖诱导饮食(OD)喂养 C57BL/6 雌性和雄性小鼠。通过流式细胞术分离和分析血液和脾脏免疫细胞。瘦对照组小鼠的系统和脾脏免疫细胞组成没有性别偏见,而肥胖对雌性和雄性小鼠的免疫反应有明显的不同。虽然雄性 OD 小鼠的免疫细胞改变特征是 T 细胞显著减少和髓系来源的抑制细胞(MDSC)增加,但雌性 OD 小鼠的 T 细胞数量保持不变。肥胖诱导的 T 细胞失调的性别差异与体重增加和脂肪肝的易感性有关:与雌性 OD 小鼠相比,雄性小鼠的肝炎症和脂肪肝的组织病理学特征明显更严重。我们的研究结果表明,性别会影响肥胖引起的 T 细胞失调的易感性,这可能解释了肥胖相关继发性疾病发病率的性别差异。这些结果从性别特异性的角度为理解肥胖引起的慢性炎症提供了新的见解。鉴于大多数预防肥胖相关并发症的营养、运动和治疗建议没有区分男性和女性,本研究的数据具有临床相关性,应在未来的试验和治疗策略中考虑。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5b3c/11311663/590a7a4a5804/ijms-25-08234-g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验