CD8.sup.+ T cells induce cachexia during chronic viral infection

Cachexia represents a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in various cancers, chronic inflammation and infections. Understanding of the mechanisms that drive cachexia has remained limited, especially for infection-associated cachexia (IAC). In the present paper we describe a model of reversible...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature immunology 2019-06, Vol.20 (6), p.701
Hauptverfasser: Baazim, Hatoon, Schweiger, Martina, Moschinger, Michael, Xu, Haifeng, Scherer, Thomas, Popa, Alexandra, Gallage, Suchira
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cachexia represents a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in various cancers, chronic inflammation and infections. Understanding of the mechanisms that drive cachexia has remained limited, especially for infection-associated cachexia (IAC). In the present paper we describe a model of reversible cachexia in mice with chronic viral infection and identify an essential role for CD8.sup.+ T cells in IAC. Cytokines linked to cancer-associated cachexia did not contribute to IAC. Instead, virus-specific CD8.sup.+ T cells caused morphologic and molecular changes in the adipose tissue, which led to depletion of lipid stores. These changes occurred at a time point that preceded the peak of the CD8.sup.+ T cell response and required T cell-intrinsic type I interferon signaling and antigen-specific priming. Our results link systemic antiviral immune responses to adipose-tissue remodeling and reveal an underappreciated role of CD8.sup.+ T cells in IAC.
ISSN:1529-2908
1529-2916
DOI:10.1038/s41590-019-0397-y