Coinhibitory Suppression of T Cell Activation by CD40 Protects Against Obesity and Adipose Tissue Inflammation in Mice
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Published:2014-06-10
Issue:23
Volume:129
Page:2414-2425
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ISSN:0009-7322
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Container-title:Circulation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Circulation
Author:
Wolf Dennis1, Jehle Felix1, Michel Nathaly Anto1, Bukosza Eva Nora1, Rivera Jennifer1, Chen Yung Chih1, Hoppe Natalie1, Dufner Bianca1, Rodriguez Alexandra Ortiz1, Colberg Christian1, Nieto Leandro1, Rupprecht Benjamin1, Wiedemann Ansgar1, Schulte Lisa1, Peikert Alexander1, Bassler Nicole1, Lozhkin Andrey1, Hergeth Sonja Patricia1, Stachon Peter1, Hilgendorf Ingo1, Willecke Florian1, von zur Mühlen Constantin1, von Elverfeldt Dominik1, Binder Christoph J.1, Aichele Peter1, Varo Nerea1, Febbraio Mark A.1, Libby Peter1, Bode Christoph1, Peter Karlheinz1, Zirlik Andreas1
Affiliation:
1. From the Atherogenesis Research Group, University Heart Center (D.W., F.J., N.A.M., E.N.B., N.H., B.D., A.O.R., C.C., L.N., B.R., A.W., L.S., A.P., A.L., S.P.H., P.S., I.H., F.W., C.v.z.M., C.B., A.Z.) and Institute for Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, Department of Immunology (P.A.), University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany; Atherothrombosis and Vascular Biology (F.J., J.R., Y.C.C., C.C., N.B., K.P.) and Cellular and Molecular Metabolism (M.A.F.), Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne...
Abstract
Background—
Costimulatory cascades such as the CD40L-CD40 dyad enhance immune cell activation and inflammation during atherosclerosis. Here, we tested the hypothesis that CD40 directly modulates traits of the metabolic syndrome in diet-induced obesity in mice.
Methods and Results—
To induce the metabolic syndrome, wild-type or CD40
−/−
mice consumed a high-fat diet for 20 weeks. Unexpectedly, CD40
−/−
mice exhibited increased weight gain, impaired insulin secretion, augmented accumulation of inflammatory cells in adipose tissue, and enhanced proinflammatory gene expression. This proinflammatory and adverse metabolic phenotype could be transplanted into wild-type mice by reconstitution with CD40-deficient lymphocytes, indicating a major role for CD40 in T or B cells in this context. Conversely, therapeutic activation of CD40 signaling by the stimulating antibody FGK45 abolished further weight gain during the study, lowered glucose levels, improved insulin sensitivity, and suppressed adipose tissue inflammation. Mechanistically, CD40 activation decreased the expression of proinflammatory cytokines in T cells but not in B cells or macrophages. Finally, repopulation of lymphocyte-free Rag1
−/−
mice with CD40
−/−
T cells provoked dysmetabolism and inflammation, corroborating a protective role of CD40 on T cells in the metabolic syndrome. Finally, levels of soluble CD40 showed a positive association with obesity in humans, suggesting clinical relevance of our findings.
Conclusions—
We present the surprising finding that CD40 deficiency on T cells aggravates whereas activation of CD40 signaling improves adipose tissue inflammation and its metabolic complications. Therefore, positive modulation of the CD40 pathway might describe a novel therapeutic concept against cardiometabolic disease.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
54 articles.
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