| Literature DB >> 27899808 |
M E Şelli1, G Wick2, D C Wraith3, A C Newby1.
Abstract
Adaptive immunity has been implicated in adipose tissue inflammation, obesity and its adverse metabolic consequences. No obesity-related autoantigen has yet been identified, although heat shock protein 60 (HSP60) has been implicated in other autoimmune diseases. We investigated whether feeding a high-fat diet to C57BL/6J mice would cause autoimmunity to HSP60 and whether immunomodulation with peptides from HSP60 would reverse the resulting obesity or metabolic dysfunction. Obese mice had higher circulating levels of HSP60 associated with increased T-lymphocyte proliferation responses and the emergence of circulating IgG1 and IgG2c antibody levels against HSP60. Treatment with escalating doses of a mixture of three proven immunomodulatory HSP60 peptides did not reduce weight but completely reversed the increase in VLDL/LDL levels and partially reversed the glucose intolerance in obese mice. Obese mice mount an autoimmune response to HSP60, which partly underlies the resulting metabolic disturbances.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27899808 PMCID: PMC5300117 DOI: 10.1038/ijo.2016.216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) ISSN: 0307-0565 Impact factor: 5.095
Figure 1Effect of HFD on weight gain, metabolism and autoimmunity to HSP60. Groups of mice (n=7) were fed HFD or ND for 16 weeks. (a) Body weights (P=0.007) and (b) epididymal fat pad weights (P=0.004) were significantly increased by HFD. (c) Circulating LDL/VLDL levels were also significantly increased (P=0.005). (d) Mouse HSP60 levels measured in serum samples by ELISA were significantly higher in HFD compared with ND fed mice (P=0.039; n=19 each). (e) T-cell proliferation (expressed relative to the medium alone negative control) increased significantly in HFD compared with ND splenoctes when stimulated by 0.1 μg ml−1 (P=0.013) or 10 μg ml−1 (P=0.038) of recombinant mouse HSP60. (f) Both anti-HSP60 IgG1 and IgG2c circulating antibody levels were significantly elevated by HFD (Pmax=0.008 for IgG1; Pmax=0.00009 for IgG2c).
Figure 2Effect of HSP60 peptide treatment on obesity, metabolic dysfunction and autoimmunity to HSP60. (a) Mice (n=14) given HFD or HFD with HSP60 peptides increased weight to the same extent relative to ND (P=0.000002 for HFD, P=0.00045 for HSP60). (b) Epididymal fat pad weights were similarly doubled by HFD or HFD with HSP60 peptides (P=0.0012 for HFD, P=0.00009 for HSP60). (c) HFD increased LDL/VLDL (P=0.0003) and HDL levels (P=0.00045) and the HSP60 treatment significantly normalised LDL/VLDL levels (P=0.0088) but not HDL levels. (d) HFD significantly impaired glucose tolerance (P=3.4 × 10−18, two-way ANOVA) and the impairment was partially but significantly reversed by HSP60 peptide treatment (P=0.0079). In a subgroup (n=7 each): (e) no differences were found in insulin tolerance between the three groups. (f) From flow cytometry, epididymal stromal vascular fraction CD45+CD11b+F4/80+ macrophages were increased (P=0.013) and (g) CD45+CD3+CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells were decreased significantly (P=0.003) with HFD or HFD plus HSP60 peptides. (h) There was an increase in the level of anti-HSP60 IgG1 antibodies observed in both HFD groups, but only the increase in the peptide treatment group was significant (P=0.022). (i) Anti-HSP60 IgG2c antibodies were increased in HFD mice, but this was significant only in the HFD alone group (P=0.048 for 1/16 dilution).