학술논문

Interferon gamma mediates the reduction of adipose tissue regulatory T cells in human obesity
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Nature Communications. 13(1)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
2041-1723
Abstract
Decreased adipose tissue regulatory T cells contribute to insulin resistance in obese mice, however, little is known about the mechanisms regulating adipose tissue regulatory T cells numbers in humans. Here we obtain adipose tissue from obese and lean volunteers. Regulatory T cell abundance is lower in obese vs. lean visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissue and associates with reduced insulin sensitivity and altered adipocyte metabolic gene expression. Regulatory T cells numbers decline following high-fat diet induction in lean volunteers. We see alteration in major histocompatibility complex II pathway in adipocytes from obese patients and after high fat ingestion, which increases T helper 1 cell numbers and decreases regulatory T cell differentiation. We also observe increased expression of inhibitory co-receptors including programmed cell death protein 1 and OX40 in visceral adipose tissue regulatory T cells from patients with obesity. In human obesity, these global effects of interferon gamma to reduce regulatory T cells and diminish their function appear to instigate adipose inflammation and suppress adipocyte metabolism, leading to insulin resistance.
Murine models of obesity suggest that decreases in the adipose tissue regulatory T cell compartment may contribute to insulin resistance, but how this corresponds in the human clinical context is less well understood. Here the authors propose a role for interferon gamma in shrinking the adipose tissue regulatory T cell compartment seen in human obesity and assess the alterations seen during induction of dietary changes.