학술논문

Eosinophils regulate adipose tissue inflammation and sustain physical and immunological fitness in old age
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Metabolism. 2(8)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Nutrition
Obesity
Adipose Tissue
Adipose Tissue
White
Adult
Aged
Aging
Animals
Eosinophils
Gene Expression Regulation
Glucose Tolerance Test
Homeostasis
Humans
Immunity
Inflammation
Interleukin-4
Mice
Mice
Inbred C57BL
Middle Aged
Muscle Strength
Physical Fitness
Satellite Cells
Skeletal Muscle
Young Adult
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics
Medical physiology
Nutrition and dietetics
Language
Abstract
Adipose tissue eosinophils (ATEs) are important in the control of obesity-associated inflammation and metabolic disease. However, the way in which ageing impacts the regulatory role of ATEs remains unknown. Here, we show that ATEs undergo major age-related changes in distribution and function associated with impaired adipose tissue homeostasis and systemic low-grade inflammation in both humans and mice. We find that exposure to a young systemic environment partially restores ATE distribution in aged parabionts and reduces adipose tissue inflammation. Approaches to restore ATE distribution using adoptive transfer of eosinophils from young mice into aged recipients proved sufficient to dampen age-related local and systemic low-grade inflammation. Importantly, restoration of a youthful systemic milieu by means of eosinophil transfers resulted in systemic rejuvenation of the aged host, manifesting in improved physical and immune fitness that was partially mediated by eosinophil-derived IL-4. Together, these findings support a critical function of adipose tissue as a source of pro-ageing factors and uncover a new role of eosinophils in promoting healthy ageing by sustaining adipose tissue homeostasis.