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Obesity-Induced Metabolic Stress Leads to Biased Effector Memory CD4+ T Cell Differentiation via PI3K p110δ-Akt-Mediated Signals.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Mauro, Claudio 
Smith, Joanne 
Cucchi, Danilo 
Coe, David 
Fu, Hongmei 

Abstract

Low-grade systemic inflammation associated to obesity leads to cardiovascular complications, caused partly by infiltration of adipose and vascular tissue by effector T cells. The signals leading to T cell differentiation and tissue infiltration during obesity are poorly understood. We tested whether saturated fatty acid-induced metabolic stress affects differentiation and trafficking patterns of CD4+ T cells. Memory CD4+ T cells primed in high-fat diet-fed donors preferentially migrated to non-lymphoid, inflammatory sites, independent of the metabolic status of the hosts. This was due to biased CD4+ T cell differentiation into CD44hi-CCR7lo-CD62Llo-CXCR3+-LFA1+ effector memory-like T cells upon priming in high-fat diet-fed animals. Similar phenotype was observed in obese subjects in a cohort of free-living people. This developmental bias was independent of any crosstalk between CD4+ T cells and dendritic cells and was mediated via direct exposure of CD4+ T cells to palmitate, leading to increased activation of a PI3K p110δ-Akt-dependent pathway upon priming.

Description

Keywords

Akt, CD4, T lymphocyte, differentiation, effector memory, high-fat diet, inflammation, obesity, palmitate, saturated fatty acid, Adiposity, Animals, Antigen Presentation, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Cell Differentiation, Cell Movement, Dendritic Cells, Diet, High-Fat, Fatty Acids, Female, Humans, Immunologic Memory, Inflammation, Lymphocyte Activation, Lymphoid Tissue, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Obesity, Oxidation-Reduction, Phenotype, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt, Receptors, CXCR3, Signal Transduction, Stress, Physiological

Journal Title

Cell Metab

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1550-4131
1932-7420

Volume Title

25

Publisher

Elsevier BV