| Literature DB >> 28720716 |
Ludovic Breasson1, Barbara Becattini1, Claudia Sardi, Angela Molinaro, Fabio Zani1, Romina Marone2, Fabrizio Botindari2, Mélanie Bousquenaud1, Curzio Ruegg1, Matthias P Wymann3, Giovanni Solinas4.
Abstract
The phosphoinositide 3-kinase γ (PI3Kγ) plays a major role in leukocyte recruitment during acute inflammation and has been proposed to inhibit classical macrophage activation by driving immunosuppressive gene expression. PI3Kγ plays an important role in diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance. In seeking to determine the underlying molecular mechanisms, we showed that PI3Kγ action in high-fat diet-induced inflammation and insulin resistance depended largely on its role in the control of adiposity, which was due to PI3Kγ activity in a nonhematopoietic cell type. However, PI3Kγ activity in leukocytes was required for efficient neutrophil recruitment to adipose tissue. Neutrophil recruitment was correlated with proinflammatory gene expression in macrophages in adipose tissue, which triggered insulin resistance early during the development of obesity. Our data challenge the concept that PI3Kγ is a general suppressor of classical macrophage activation and indicate that PI3Kγ controls macrophage gene expression by non-cell-autonomous mechanisms, the outcome of which is context-dependent.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28720716 DOI: 10.1126/scisignal.aaf2969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Signal ISSN: 1945-0877 Impact factor: 8.192