AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the impact of the intestinal immune system, particularly IgA immune cells, on insulin resistance linked to obesity from a high-fat diet (HFD).
  • It reveals that HFD reduces IgA immune cells and their secretory form, which are essential for maintaining healthy glucose metabolism.
  • Additionally, manipulation of IgA levels can influence inflammation, gut permeability, and microbiome composition, suggesting that targeting intestinal IgA could improve strategies for managing obesity-related metabolic disorders.

Article Abstract

The intestinal immune system is emerging as an important contributor to obesity-related insulin resistance, but the role of intestinal B cells in this context is unclear. Here, we show that high fat diet (HFD) feeding alters intestinal IgA immune cells and that IgA is a critical immune regulator of glucose homeostasis. Obese mice have fewer IgA immune cells and less secretory IgA and IgA-promoting immune mediators. HFD-fed IgA-deficient mice have dysfunctional glucose metabolism, a phenotype that can be recapitulated by adoptive transfer of intestinal-associated pan-B cells. Mechanistically, IgA is a crucial link that controls intestinal and adipose tissue inflammation, intestinal permeability, microbial encroachment and the composition of the intestinal microbiome during HFD. Current glucose-lowering therapies, including metformin, affect intestinal-related IgA B cell populations in mice, while bariatric surgery regimen alters the level of fecal secretory IgA in humans. These findings identify intestinal IgA immune cells as mucosal mediators of whole-body glucose regulation in diet-induced metabolic disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6692361PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-11370-yDOI Listing

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