| Literature DB >> 29868016 |
Yazan Alwarawrah1, Kaitlin Kiernan2, Nancie J MacIver1,2,3.
Abstract
Immune cell function and metabolism are closely linked. Many studies have now clearly demonstrated that alterations in cellular metabolism influence immune cell function and that, conversely, immune cell function determines the cellular metabolic state. Less well understood, however, are the effects of systemic metabolism or whole organism nutritional status on immune cell function and metabolism. Several studies have demonstrated that undernutrition is associated with immunosuppression, which leads to both increased susceptibility to infection and protection against several types of autoimmune disease, whereas overnutrition is associated with low-grade, chronic inflammation that increases the risk of metabolic and cardiovascular disease, promotes autoreactivity, and disrupts protective immunity. Here, we review the effects of nutritional status on immunity and highlight the effects of nutrition on circulating cytokines and immune cell populations in both human studies and mouse models. As T cells are critical members of the immune system, which direct overall immune response, we will focus this review on the influence of systemic nutritional status on T cell metabolism and function. Several cytokines and hormones have been identified which mediate the effects of nutrition on T cell metabolism and function through the expression and action of key regulatory signaling proteins. Understanding how T cells are sensitive to both inadequate and overabundant nutrients may enhance our ability to target immune cell metabolism and alter immunity in both malnutrition and obesity.Entities:
Keywords: T cells; cellular metabolism; inflammation; leptin; malnutrition; obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29868016 PMCID: PMC5968375 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Key immune signaling molecules that change in response to nutritional status.
| Molecule | Class | Obesity | Malnutrition | Secreted by | Immune function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leptin | Adipocytokine | Increased | Decreased | Adipocytes | Pleiotropic hormone with many targets and many functions in immune cells | ( |
| Adiponectin | Adipocytokine | Decreased | Conflicting reports—may be context-dependent | Adipocytes | Polarization of monocytes and macrophages toward M2 phenotype | ( |
| Resistin | Adipocytokine | Increased | No clear correlation; more investigation needed | Adipocytes, macrophages | Stimulates the production of TNF-α and IL-12 in macrophages | ( |
| Visfatin | Adipocytokine | Increased | No clear correlation; more investigation needed | Adipocytes | Stimulates the production of TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6 | ( |
| TNF-α | Cytokine | Increased | Mixed results, may depend on context | Adipocytes | Neutrophil chemotaxis | ( |
| IL-1β | Cytokine | Increased | Mixed results, may depend on context | Non-adipocyte cells in adipose tissue | Stimulates macrophage activity | ( |
| IL-6 | Cytokine | Increased | Decreased | Adipocytes, macrophages | Recruitment of macrophages; polarization toward pro-inflammatory classically activated macrophages | ( |
| IL-8 | Cytokine | Increased | Decreased | Adipocytes, macrophages | Induces neutrophil chemotaxis | ( |
| IL-10 | Cytokine | Mixed—may be context-dependent | Increased | Treg cells, iNKT cells, DCs, adipocytes, macrophages | Broad anti-inflammatory function | ( |
| IL-33 | Cytokine | Decreased | Increased | DCs, macrophages, epithelial cells | Maintains adipose tissue-resident Treg cell function, promotes Th2 response, promotes alternatively activated macrophage polarization | ( |
| IL-1RA | Cytokine | Increased | Unknown | Macrophages, epithelial cells | Inhibits IL-1α and IL-1β activity | ( |
| MCP-1 | Chemokine | Increased | Increased | Macrophages, adipocytes | Macrophage recruitment | ( |
| MIF | Chemokine | Increased | Decreased | Adipocytes, lymphocytes | Inhibits macrophage migration | ( |
| MIP-1α | Chemokine | Increased | Unknown | Adipocytes | Enhances macrophage migration | ( |
| MIP-1β | Chemokine | Increased | Unknown | Adipocytes | Enhances macrophage migration | ( |
Figure 1Suggested links between nutritional status, immune metabolism, and immune function. In settings of extreme nutritional status (obesity or malnutrition), changes in immune cell populations, hormones, and cytokine levels lead to alternations in immune cell metabolism, which thereby influence immune function.