AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity triggers inflammation in the body by activating specific immune cells called adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs), shifting their types from beneficial to harmful.
  • In healthy individuals, ATMs in fat tissue generally promote tissue health (M2 type), but in obese people, there’s an increase in inflammatory ATMs (M1 type), especially in subcutaneous fat (SAT).
  • The study identified key markers for these macrophage types and found that while the overall count of beneficial ATMs increased in SAT of obese individuals, changes in visceral fat (VAT) were more complex, with a mix of both harmful and helpful macrophages present.

Article Abstract

Obesity is a chronic inflammatory disease associated with adipose tissue macrophage (ATM) activation. ATMs from lean mice contribute to tissue homeostasis by their M2-oriented polarization, whereas obesity leads to an increase of M1 inflammatory ATMs that underlies obesity-related metabolic disorders. In humans, studies characterizing ATMs and their functional status are limited. Here we investigated ATM phenotype in visceral (VAT) and subcutaneous (SAT) adipose tissue from healthy lean and obese individuals using two molecules previously identified as markers of M1-like and M2-like/tissue-resident macrophages, the C-type lectin CLEC5A and the scavenger receptor CD163L1, respectively. CD163L1 was expressed by the majority of ATMs, and CD163L1 ATM density was greater with respect to cells expressing the pan-macrophage markers CD68 or CD11b. ATM counts in SAT, but not in VAT, increased in obese compared to lean individuals, measured with the three markers. Accordingly, CD163L1, CD68 and ITGAM gene expression was significantly enhanced in obese with respect to control individuals only in SAT. CLEC5A ATMs had a proinflammatory profile and were abundant in the lean VAT, but their density diminished in obesity. The only ATM subset that increased its counts in the obese VAT had a mixed M1-like (CD11c CD163 CD209 ) and M2-like (CLEC5A CD206 ) phenotype. ATM expansion was dominated by a subset of M2-like macrophages (CD11c CLEC5A CD163 CD206 CD209 ) in the obese SAT, with a minor contribution of a CD11c CLEC5A ATM subpopulation. Thus, both SAT and VAT seems to limit inflammation during obesity by differentially altering their ATM subset composition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imcb.12380DOI Listing

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