학술논문

Immune Modulation of Adipocyte Mitochondrial Metabolism
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Endocrinology. August 2022, Vol. 163 Issue 8, p1k, 7 p.
Subject
Physiological aspects
Development and progression
Genetic aspects
Apoptosis -- Genetic aspects -- Physiological aspects
Macrophages -- Physiological aspects
Fatty acids -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Inflammation -- Genetic aspects -- Development and progression
B cells -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Cytokines -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Branched chain amino acids -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Genes -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Type 2 diabetes -- Development and progression -- Genetic aspects
Electron transport -- Physiological aspects -- Genetic aspects
Adipose tissue -- Genetic aspects -- Physiological aspects
T cells -- Genetic aspects -- Physiological aspects
Adipose tissues -- Genetic aspects -- Physiological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
0013-7227
Abstract
Adipose tissue was classically considered a static organ whose function was to simply accumulate or release energy to fulfill whole-body demands in response to insulin and/or catecholamine challenge. However, it [...]
Immune cells infiltrate adipose tissue as a function of age, sex, and diet, leading to a variety of regulatory processes linked to metabolic disease and dysfunction. Cytokines and chemokines produced by resident macrophages, B cells, T cells and eosinophils play major role(s) in fat cell mitochondrial functions modulating pyruvate oxidation, electron transport and oxidative stress, branched chain amino acid metabolism, fatty acid oxidation, and apoptosis. Indeed, cytokine-dependent downregulation of numerous genes affecting mitochondrial metabolism is strongly linked to the development of the metabolic syndrome, whereas the potentiation of mitochondrial metabolism represents a counterregulatory process improving metabolic outcomes. In contrast, inflammatory cytokines activate mitochondrially linked cell death pathways such as apoptosis, pyroptosis, necroptosis, and ferroptosis. As such, the adipocyte mitochondrion represents a major intersection point for immunometabolic regulation of central metabolism. Key Words: adipose, macrophage, mitochondria, inflammation