| Literature DB >> 26146464 |
Melissa Hui Yen Chng1, Michael N Alonso1, Sarah E Barnes1, Khoa D Nguyen1, Edgar G Engleman1.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is a metabolic disease that is strongly tied to obesity and often preceded by insulin resistance (IR). It has been established that chronic inflammation of hypertrophic adipose tissue depots in obese individuals leads to obesity-associated IR and is mediated by cells of the innate immune system, particularly macrophages. More recently, cells of the adaptive immune system, B and T lymphocytes, have also emerged as important regulators of glucose homeostasis, raising the intriguing possibility that antigen-driven immune responses play a role in disease. In this review, we critically evaluate the roles that various B and T cell subsets play in IR, and then we examine the data suggesting that antigen-driven mechanisms, such as antigen presentation and costimulation, may drive the activity of these lymphocytes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26146464 PMCID: PMC4471324 DOI: 10.1155/2015/593075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Evidence for antigen-specific mechanisms in obesity-associated IR.
| Source | |
|---|---|
| Direct evidence of antigen-specific pathology | |
| MHC-II presentation of antigen is necessary for metabolic defects | [ |
| VAT-specific TCR repertoire restriction in obese IR mice | [ |
| Expansion of effector memory T cells is MHC-II dependent | [ |
| Regulation of glucose intolerance is not achieved by transfer of CD4+ OT-2 T cells | [ |
| Transfer of disease by antibody is dependent on metabolic status of source and recipient mice | [ |
| Insulin resistant and insulin sensitive individuals have distinct IgG autoantibody signatures | [ |
| Indirect evidence of antigen-specific activation | |
| Enrichment of antibody within crown-like structures | [ |
| Enrichment of T cells within crown-like structures | [ |
| Expansion of effector memory T cells in obesity is specific to the adipose tissue | [ |
| Antibody class switching is increased in obesity | [ |
| Contradictory evidence | |
| No HLA linkage in type 2 diabetes | [ |
| No T cell or B cell specific genes linked to type 2 diabetes | [ |
| Costimulation is beneficial for glucose metabolism or lack of costimulation worsens glucose metabolism | [ |
Figure 1Possible antigen-specific processes in IR pathogenesis. The antigens targeted in IR can come either from self or external sources, so long as they are chronically available to the adaptive immune system. Necrotic death of adipocytes is one potential source of autoantigen (1). External sources of antigen include gut microbiota and dietary antigens, which may enter the circulation passively due to increased intestinal permeability or via chylomicron transport (2). When the antigen is present within the inflamed surroundings of the adipose tissue, B cells can recognize the antigen directly through their surface Ig receptors (3). Alternatively, soluble antibody can bind to the antigen and enable opsonization by macrophages or dendritic cells, which then process and present the antigen on MHC-II to cognate naïve T cells (4). Adipocytes can also present antigen on MHC-II directly to T cells (5). If the T cell recognizes a correct peptide-MHC pair and receives CD28 stimulation and cytokine signals, it differentiates into effector T cells (6). A few of these cells form memory T cells which have a lower threshold for activation when they encounter the same antigen again (7). Activated T cells can also become follicular helper T cells which enter the germinal center to provide help to activated B cells that recognize antigens from the same antigen source (8). Activated B cells present antigen to follicular helper T cells and receive stimulation through their CD40 coreceptors (8), which licenses the cells to undergo antibody class switching, somatic hypermutation, and formation of memory B cells or long-lived plasma cells. Memory B cells also have a lower threshold for activation in a repeat encounter with antigen while the plasma cells maintain somatically hypermutated antibody production for the antigen (9). From these interactions, a strong, specific, and chronic immune response develops that leads to obesity-related IR. Not shown in this diagram are the regulatory cells that help to modulate these processes, for example, Tregs, Th2 cells, B-1a, and Breg cells.