T cells with increased responsiveness cause obesity in mice without diet intervention

Obesity is a complex multicausal disease that can cause morbidity and mortality, and there is need for improved knowledge on the underlying mechanisms. Using a mouse model of increased T cell responsiveness, we show that development of obesity can be driven by immune cells. This was confirmed with b...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2024-04, Vol.27 (4), p.109471-109471, Article 109471
Hauptverfasser: Gregersen, Ida, Kong, Xiang Y., Kooijman, Sander, Foyn, Håvard, Grannes, Helene, Olsen, Maria B., Lone, Anna M., Yang, Kuan, Quiles-Jiménez, Ana, Tran, Marianne, Øgaard, Jonas, Segers, Filip M., Rashidi, Azita, Sagen, Ellen Lund, Lauritzen, Knut H., Pronk, Amanda C.M., de Boer, Jan Freark, Holven, Kirsten B., Melum, Espen, Aukrust, Pål, Taskén, Kjetil, Holm, Sverre, Rensen, Patrick C.N., Dahl, Tuva B., Halvorsen, Bente
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Obesity is a complex multicausal disease that can cause morbidity and mortality, and there is need for improved knowledge on the underlying mechanisms. Using a mouse model of increased T cell responsiveness, we show that development of obesity can be driven by immune cells. This was confirmed with bone marrow transplantation and adoptive T cell transfer to several recipient mouse models. Single-cell RNA sequencing and CyTOF analysis showed that the mice display altered composition of circulating T cells and increased T cell activation in visceral adipose tissue, suggesting activated T cells as critical players in the increased fat mass. In this study, we provide evidence that obesity can be driven by immune cell activity and in particular by T cells, which could have broad implications for prevention and treatment of this condition. [Display omitted] •Mice with increased T cell responsiveness develop obesity, without diet intervention•The obesity phenotype can be transferred by immune cells to several recipient models•Recipient mice display increased inflammation in visceral adipose tissue Immunology; Nutrition; Obesity
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2024.109471