| Literature DB >> 31885787 |
José Romeo Villarreal-Calderón1, Ricardo X Cuéllar1, Martín R Ramos-González1, Nestor Rubio-Infante1, Elena C Castillo1, Leticia Elizondo-Montemayor1,2, Gerardo García-Rivas1,3.
Abstract
Low-grade chronic inflammation plays a pivotal role among other pathophysiological mechanisms involved in obesity. Innate and adaptive immune cells undergo systemic proinflammatory polarization that gives rise to an increased secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, which in turn leads to insulin resistance. Bariatric surgery is currently the most effective treatment for obesity, as it brings on significant weight loss, glucose metabolism improvement, and a decrease in systemic inflammation biomarkers. After bariatric surgery, several changes have been reported to occur in adaptive immunity, including reduction in CD4+ and CD8+ T cell counts, a decrease in the Th1/Th2 ratio, an increase in B regulatory cells, and reduction in proinflammatory cytokine secretion. Overall, there seems to be a major shift in several lymphocyte populations from a proinflammatory to an anti-inflammatory phenotype. Furthermore, increased antioxidant activity and reduced lipid and DNA oxidation products have been reported after bariatric surgery in circulating mononuclear cells. This paper highlights the shift in the adaptive immune system in response to weight loss and improved insulin sensitivity, as well as the interplay between immunological and metabolic adaptations as a result of bariatric surgery. Finally, based on data from research, we propose several mechanisms such as changes in adaptive immune cell phenotypes and their by-products, recruitment in adipose tissue, reduced oxidative stress, and modification in metabolic substrate availability as drivers to reduce low-grade chronic inflammation after bariatric surgery in severe obesity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31885787 PMCID: PMC6925764 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3940739
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Graphic representation of bariatric surgical procedures to achieve weight loss and a % decrease in CRP. LAGB: laparoscopic adjustable gastric band; LSG: laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; BPD-DS: biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch; CRP: C-reactive protein. References in brackets. Further details in text.
Comparison of changes in systemic C-reactive protein observed after weight loss across different surgical procedures.
| Population | Mean age (years) | Intervention | Follow-up (months) | Weight loss (%) | CRP reduction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36 subjects | 37 | RYGB/LSG | 6 | 24.3 | 70.4% | [ |
| 46 subjects | 40.6 | LAGB | 3 | 13.2 | 19.1% | [ |
| 20 subjects | LAGB | 36 | 30.3 | 55.3% | [ | |
| 30 subjects | 40.3 | LSG | 12 | 29.3% | 60.4% | [ |
| 70 subjects | 41.3 | BPD-DS | 12 | 37.1% | 84% | [ |
F: female; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; LSG: laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy; LAGB: laparoscopic adjustable gastric band; BPD-DS: biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch; CRP: C-reactive protein.
Figure 2Potential mechanism of improvement in inflammatory status after bariatric surgery-induced weight loss. Obesity induces a systemic inflammatory status characterized by increases in C-reactive protein, proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IFN-γ, and an inflammatory infiltrate in adipose tissue (AT) and a decrease in circulating Treg lymphocytes. Inflammatory cytokines, among other mechanisms, induce insulin resistance in obesity. Bariatric surgery induces a significant weight loss that is associated with an increase in insulin sensitivity and a decrease in systemic inflammation. An important change in the lymphocyte phenotype is a decrease in the Th1/Th2 ratio after weight loss. It is possible that insulin effect on T cell differentiation may mediate inflammation resolution, at least partially.
Summary of changes in lymphocyte populations and cytokine secretion observed after bariatric surgery-induced weight loss.
| Population | Intervention | Main findings | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13 subjects | 12 weeks of DCR (860-1434 kcal/day) followed by LGB | ↓ Th1/Th2 after DCR; changes maintained 12 weeks after LGB | [ |
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| 15 subjects | LGB | ↓ T cells and Th1/Th2, associated with lower FG, glucose AUC, and improved insulin secretion | [ |
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| 9 subjects | RYGB | 3 months after: B cells lose the capacity to support production of IL-17 and IFN- | [ |
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| 20 subjects | Laparoscopic greater curvature plication | 4 months after: ↓ CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and leptin | [ |
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| 8 subjects | RYGB | 3 months after: Tfh cells secreted: ↓ IFN- | [ |
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| 69 subjects | RYGB | ↑ MAIT cells (potentially explained by ↓ peripheral infiltration); IL-17 remains | [ |
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| 27 women | RYGB | 3 months after: ↓ IR, CRP, leptin, and T cells; ↑ TNF- | [ |
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| 58 subjects | 6 weeks of VLCD followed by BPD | 1 year after BPD: ↓ T cells and B cells in IR subjects | [ |
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| 20 women | LGB and RYGB | Correlation: changes from baseline in BMI and CD4+ cells only in the RYGB group at 3 months | [ |
DCR: dietary caloric restriction; BMI: body mass index; T2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus; IR: insulin resistance; LGB: laparoscopic gastric banding; RYGB: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass; VLCD: very low-calorie diet; BDP: biliopancreatic diversion; ↓: decrease; ↑: increase; FG: fasting glucose; MAIT: mucosal-associated invariant T cells; IR: insulin resistance; CRP: C-reactive protein; Ref: reference.
Figure 3Main effects related to the immunological switch after bariatric surgery. Changes involved after weight loss include several molecular pathways: (i) a decrease in adipocyte proinflammatory mediators, (ii) changes in the activation and recruitment of immune cells in adipose tissue, (iii) modification in nutrient and metabolite absorption, and (iv) alterations in the intestinal microbiota.
Figure 4Metabolism modulates immune cell activation. Metabolic differences in naïve and activated T and B cells. Differences in energy supply between proinflammatory cells (M1 macrophages (M1 Ma)), dendritic cells (DC), granulocytes, and anti-inflammatory cells (M2 macrophages (M2 Ma)).