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Publication : Inhibition of leptin regulation of parasympathetic signaling as a cause of extreme body weight-associated asthma.

First Author  Arteaga-Solis E Year  2013
Journal  Cell Metab Volume  17
Issue  1 Pages  35-48
PubMed ID  23312282 Mgi Jnum  J:195073
Mgi Id  MGI:5476393 Doi  10.1016/j.cmet.2012.12.004
Citation  Arteaga-Solis E, et al. (2013) Inhibition of leptin regulation of parasympathetic signaling as a cause of extreme body weight-associated asthma. Cell Metab 17(1):35-48
abstractText  Impaired lung function caused by decreased airway diameter (bronchoconstriction) is frequently observed whether body weight is abnormally high or low. That these opposite conditions affect the airways similarly suggests that the regulation of airway diameter and body weight are intertwined. We show here that, independently of its regulation of appetite, melanocortin pathway, or sympathetic tone, leptin is necessary and sufficient to increase airway diameter by signaling through its cognate receptor in cholinergic neurons. The latter decreases parasympathetic signaling through the M(3) muscarinic receptor in airway smooth muscle cells, thereby increasing airway diameter without affecting local inflammation. Accordingly, decreasing parasympathetic tone genetically or pharmacologically corrects bronchoconstriction and normalizes lung function in obese mice regardless of bronchial inflammation. This study reveals an adipocyte-dependent regulation of bronchial diameter whose disruption contributes to the impaired lung function caused by abnormal body weight. These findings may be of use in the management of obesity-associated asthma.
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