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Obesity results in adipose tissue T cell exhaustion
Cara E. Porsche, Jennifer B. Delproposto, Lynn Geletka, Robert O’Rourke, Carey N. Lumeng
Cara E. Porsche, Jennifer B. Delproposto, Lynn Geletka, Robert O’Rourke, Carey N. Lumeng
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Research Article Inflammation Metabolism

Obesity results in adipose tissue T cell exhaustion

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Abstract

Despite studies implicating adipose tissue T cells (ATT) in the initiation and persistence of adipose tissue inflammation, fundamental gaps in knowledge regarding ATT function impedes progress toward understanding how obesity influences adaptive immunity. We hypothesized that ATT activation and function would have tissue-resident–specific properties and that obesity would potentiate their inflammatory properties. We assessed ATT activation and inflammatory potential within mouse and human stromal vascular fraction (SVF). Surprisingly, murine and human ATTs from obese visceral white adipose tissue exhibited impaired inflammatory characteristics upon stimulation. Both environmental and cell-intrinsic factors are implicated in ATT dysfunction. Soluble factors from obese SVF inhibit ATT activation. Additionally, chronic signaling from macrophage major histocompatibility complex II (MHCII) is necessary for ATT impairment in obese adipose tissue but is independent of increased PD1 expression. To assess intracellular signaling mechanisms responsible for ATT inflammation impairments, single-cell RNA sequencing of ATTs was performed. ATTs in obese adipose tissue exhibit enrichment of genes characteristic of T cell exhaustion and increased expression of coinhibitory receptor Btla. In sum, this work suggests that obesity-induced ATTs have functional characteristics and gene expression resembling T cell exhaustion induced by local soluble factors and cell-to-cell interactions in adipose tissue.

Authors

Cara E. Porsche, Jennifer B. Delproposto, Lynn Geletka, Robert O’Rourke, Carey N. Lumeng

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Figure 5

T cell receptor and coreceptor components are differentially expressed in obese mice.

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T cell receptor and coreceptor components are differentially expressed i...
(A) CD28 and TCR-β expression quantified by MFI of flow cytometry staining on freshly isolated Tconv and CD8+ T cells. n = 4 biological replicates/group, analyzed by Student’s t test where *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001. (B) Frequency of PD1 expression on CD8+ T cells and Tconv from freshly isolated eWAT and splenocytes. Representative histograms of PD1 expression are shown on the right of each group. n = 7–8 biological replicates/group, analyzed by Student’s t test where *P < 0.05. (C) Correlation of PD1 expression on Tconv and CD8+ ATTs taken from human omentum, compared with patient HbA1c. n = 8 biological replicates, using linear regression analysis.

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