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From fat storage to immune hubs: the emerging role of adipocytes in coordinating the immune response to infection. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Adipose tissue contains various cell types, including immune cells and adipocytes, which play essential roles in maintaining tissue function and influencing processes like fat storage and inflammation.
  • The interaction of these cells is linked to the inflammatory response observed in obesity, leading to increased immune cell presence and proinflammatory cytokine production.
  • Research suggests that adipocytes have evolved to respond dynamically to infections, acting as immune signaling hubs that help regulate the local immune environment during pathogen challenges.

Article Abstract

Adipose tissue is a rich source of diverse cell populations, including immune cells, adipocytes and stromal cells. Interactions between these different cell types are now appreciated to be critical for maintaining tissue structure and function, by governing processes such as adipogenesis, lipolysis and differentiation of white to beige adipocytes. Interactions between these cells also drive inflammation in obesity, leading to an expansion of adipose tissue immune cells, and the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines from immune cells and from adipocytes themselves. However, in evolutionary terms, obesity is a recent phenomenon, raising the question of why adipocytes evolved to express factors that influence the immune response. Studies of various pathogens indicate that adipocytes are highly responsive to infection, altering their metabolic profiles in a way that can be used to release nutrients and fuel the immune response. In the case of infection with the extracellular parasite Trypanosoma brucei, attenuating the ability of adipocytes to sense the cytokine IL-17 results in a loss of control of the local immune response and an increased pathogen load. Intriguingly, comparisons of the adipocyte response to infection suggest that the immune responses of these cells occur in a pathogen-dependent manner, further confirming their complexity. Here, with a focus on murine adipose tissue, we discuss the emerging concept that, in addition to their canonical function, adipocytes are immune signalling hubs that integrate and disseminate signals from the immune system to generate a local environment conducive to pathogen clearance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.17302DOI Listing

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