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Publication : Impairment of dendritic cell functionality and steady-state number in obese mice.

First Author  Macia L Year  2006
Journal  J Immunol Volume  177
Issue  9 Pages  5997-6006
PubMed ID  17056524 Mgi Jnum  J:140529
Mgi Id  MGI:3814030 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.177.9.5997
Citation  Macia L, et al. (2006) Impairment of dendritic cell functionality and steady-state number in obese mice. J Immunol 177(9):5997-6006
abstractText  There is a finely tuned interplay between immune and neuroendocrine systems. Metabolic disturbances like obesity will have serious consequences on immunity both at the cellular and at the cytokine expression levels. Our in vivo results confirm the immune deficiency of ob/ob mice, leptin deficient and massively obese, characterized by a reduced Ag-specific T cell proliferation after keyhole limpet hemocyanin immunization. In this report, we show that dendritic cells (DCs), major APCs involved in T lymphocyte priming, are affected in obese mice. Both their function and their steady-state number are disturbed. We demonstrate that DCs from ob/ob mice are less potent in stimulation of allogenic T cells in vitro. This impaired functionality is not associated with altered expression of phenotypic markers but with the secretion of immunosuppressive cytokines such as TGF-beta. Moreover, we show increased in vivo steady-state number of epidermal DCs in ob/ob mice, which is not due to a migratory defect. The ob/ob mice are characterized by the absence of functional leptin, a key adipokine linking nutrition, metabolism, and immune functions. Interestingly, intradermal injection of leptin is able to restore epidermal DC number in obese mice. Thus, DCs might be directly sensitive to metabolic disturbances, providing a partial explanation of the immunodeficiency associated with obesity.
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