| Literature DB >> 31167128 |
Yongjia Li1, Wei Zou1, Jonathan R Brestoff2, Nidhi Rohatgi1, Xiaobo Wu3, John P Atkinson3, Charles A Harris4, Steven L Teitelbaum5.
Abstract
We explored the relationship of obesity and inflammatory arthritis (IA) by selectively expressing diphtheria toxin in adipose tissue yielding "fat-free" (FF) mice completely lacking white and brown fat. FF mice exhibit systemic neutrophilia and elevated serum acute phase proteins suggesting a predisposition to severe IA. Surprisingly, FF mice are resistant to K/BxN serum-induced IA and attendant bone destruction. Despite robust systemic basal neutrophilia, neutrophil infiltration into joints of FF mice does not occur when challenged with K/BxN serum. Absence of adiponectin, leptin, or both has no effect on joint disease, but deletion of the adipokine adipsin (complement factor D) completely prevents serum-induced IA. Confirming that fat-expressed adipsin modulates the disorder, transplantation of wild-type (WT) adipose tissue into FF mice restores susceptibility to IA, whereas recipients of adipsin-deficient fat remain resistant. Thus, adipose tissue regulates development of IA through a pathway in which adipocytes modify neutrophil responses in distant tissues by producing adipsin.Entities:
Keywords: adipsin; inflammatory arthritis; neutrophils
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31167128 PMCID: PMC6643993 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.05.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423