| Literature DB >> 20331890 |
Marius Trøseid1, Ingebjørg Seljeflot, Harald Arnesen.
Abstract
The metabolic syndrome is thought to be associated with a chronic low-grade inflammation, and a growing body of evidence suggests that interleukin-18 (IL-18) might be closely related to the metabolic syndrome and its consequences. Circulating levels of IL-18 have been reported to be elevated in subjects with the metabolic syndrome, to be closely associated with the components of the syndrome, to predict cardiovascular events and mortality in populations with the metabolic syndrome and to precede the development of type 2 diabetes. IL-18 is found in the unstable atherosclerotic plaque, in adipose tissue and in muscle tissue, and is subject to several regulatory steps including cleavage by caspase-1, inactivation by IL-18 binding protein and the influence of other cytokines in modulating its interaction with the IL-18 receptor. The purpose of this review is to outline the role of IL-18 in the metabolic syndrome, with particular emphasis on cardiovascular risk and the potential effect of life style interventions.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20331890 PMCID: PMC2858122 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2840-9-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Figure 1Regulation and biological effects of interleukin-18. The cytokine is expressed as a precursor, pro-IL-18, which is inactive until cleaved by caspase-1. Once secreted, IL-18 is bound and inactivated by IL-18 binding protein (IL-18 BP), and only the free fraction can stimulate a signal transduction via the β-chain of the IL-18 receptor (IL-18R). The biological effect is dependent on the cytokine milieu: IL-18 may stimulate a Th2 response in combination with IL-2, and may act synergistically with IL-12 to stimulate a Th1 response with production of IFN-γ, a central feature of the atherosclerotic lesion.
Prospective studies evaluating the effect of elevated circulating IL-18 levels on cardiovascular, metabolic syndrome and diabetes related end points.
| Study | Patients (n) and study population | Follow-up, years | End points | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blankenberg et al. [ | 1229 | 4 | Cardiovascular mortality | Increased risk of cardiovascular mortality |
| Blankenberg et al. [ | 335 cases and 670 controls (healthy men) | 5 | CAD | Increased risk of CAD |
| Everett et al. [ | 253 cases and 253 controls (healthy women) | 6 | CVD | Increased risk of CVD |
| Koenig et al. [ | 382 cases and 1980 controls (population based) | 11 | CAD | No increased risk of CAD |
| Espinola-Klein et al. [ | 1263, stratified for MS (known CAD) | 6 | Cardiovascular mortality | Increased risk of cardiovascular mortality in MS strata |
| Trøseid et al. [ | 563, stratified for MS (elderly high risk men) | 3 | CVD | Increased risk of CVD in MS strata |
| Thorand et al. [ | 527 cases and 1698 controls (population based) | 11 | Type 2 diabetes | Increased risk of type 2 diabetes |
| Hivert et al. [ | 1012 cases and 1081 controls (women) | 12 | Type 2 diabetes | Increased risk of type 2 diabetes |
CAD; coronary artery disease, CVD; cardiovascular disease, MS; metabolic syndrome.