| Literature DB >> 30566860 |
Jérôme Gilleron1, Gwennaëlle Bouget1, Stoyan Ivanov2, Cindy Meziat1, Franck Ceppo1, Bastien Vergoni1, Mansour Djedaini1, Antoine Soprani3, Karine Dumas1, Arnaud Jacquel4, Laurent Yvan-Charvet2, Nicolas Venteclef5, Jean-François Tanti1, Mireille Cormont6.
Abstract
Obesity modifies T cell populations in adipose tissue, thereby contributing to adipose tissue inflammation and insulin resistance. Here, we show that Rab4b, a small GTPase governing endocytic trafficking, is pivotal in T cells for the development of these pathological events. Rab4b expression is decreased in adipose T cells from mice and patients with obesity. The specific depletion of Rab4b in T cells causes adipocyte hypertrophy and insulin resistance in chow-fed mice and worsens insulin resistance in obese mice. This phenotype is driven by an increase in adipose Th17 and a decrease in adipose Treg due to a cell-autonomous skew of differentiation toward Th17. The Th17/Treg imbalance initiates adipose tissue inflammation and reduces adipogenesis, leading to lipid deposition in liver and muscles. Therefore, we propose that the obesity-induced loss of Rab4b in adipose T cells may contribute to maladaptive white adipose tissue remodeling and insulin resistance by altering adipose T cell fate.Entities:
Keywords: adipose tissue; ectopic lipids; endocytosis; immunometabolism; small GTPase
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30566860 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.11.083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423