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Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity

The contribution of natural killer T (NKT) cells to the pathogenesis of metabolic abnormalities of obesity is controversial. While the combined genetic deletion of NKT and CD8(+) T-cells improves glucose tolerance and reduces inflammation, interpretation of these data have been complicated by the re...

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Autores principales: Mantell, Benjamin S., Stefanovic-Racic, Maja, Yang, Xiao, Dedousis, Nikolas, Sipula, Ian J., O'Doherty, Robert M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3108591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21674035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019831
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author Mantell, Benjamin S.
Stefanovic-Racic, Maja
Yang, Xiao
Dedousis, Nikolas
Sipula, Ian J.
O'Doherty, Robert M.
author_facet Mantell, Benjamin S.
Stefanovic-Racic, Maja
Yang, Xiao
Dedousis, Nikolas
Sipula, Ian J.
O'Doherty, Robert M.
author_sort Mantell, Benjamin S.
collection PubMed
description The contribution of natural killer T (NKT) cells to the pathogenesis of metabolic abnormalities of obesity is controversial. While the combined genetic deletion of NKT and CD8(+) T-cells improves glucose tolerance and reduces inflammation, interpretation of these data have been complicated by the recent observation that the deletion of CD8(+) T-cells alone reduces obesity-induced inflammation and metabolic dysregulation, leaving the issue of the metabolic effects of NKT cell depletion unresolved. To address this question, CD1d null mice (CD1d(−)/(−)), which lack NKT cells but have a full complement of CD8(+) T-cells, and littermate wild type controls (WT) on a pure C57BL/6J background were exposed to a high fat diet, and glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, inflammation, and obesity were assessed. Food intake (15.5±4.3 vs 15.3±1.8 kcal/mouse/day), weight gain (21.8±1.8 vs 22.8±1.4 g) and fat mass (18.6±1.9 vs 19.5±2.1 g) were similar in CD1d(−)/(−) and WT, respectively. As would be expected from these data, metabolic rate (3.0±0.1 vs 2.9±0.2 ml O(2)/g/h) and activity (21.6±4.3 vs 18.5±2.6 beam breaks/min) were unchanged by NKT cell depletion. Furthermore, the degree of insulin resistance, glucose intolerance, liver steatosis, and adipose and liver inflammatory marker expression (TNFα, IL-6, IL-10, IFN-γ, MCP-1, MIP1α) induced by high fat feeding in CD1d(−)/(−) were not different from WT. We conclude that deletion of NKT cells, in the absence of alterations in the CD8(+) T-cell population, is insufficient to protect against the development of the metabolic abnormalities of diet-induced obesity.
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spelling pubmed-31085912011-06-13 Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity Mantell, Benjamin S. Stefanovic-Racic, Maja Yang, Xiao Dedousis, Nikolas Sipula, Ian J. O'Doherty, Robert M. PLoS One Research Article The contribution of natural killer T (NKT) cells to the pathogenesis of metabolic abnormalities of obesity is controversial. While the combined genetic deletion of NKT and CD8(+) T-cells improves glucose tolerance and reduces inflammation, interpretation of these data have been complicated by the recent observation that the deletion of CD8(+) T-cells alone reduces obesity-induced inflammation and metabolic dysregulation, leaving the issue of the metabolic effects of NKT cell depletion unresolved. To address this question, CD1d null mice (CD1d(−)/(−)), which lack NKT cells but have a full complement of CD8(+) T-cells, and littermate wild type controls (WT) on a pure C57BL/6J background were exposed to a high fat diet, and glucose intolerance, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, inflammation, and obesity were assessed. Food intake (15.5±4.3 vs 15.3±1.8 kcal/mouse/day), weight gain (21.8±1.8 vs 22.8±1.4 g) and fat mass (18.6±1.9 vs 19.5±2.1 g) were similar in CD1d(−)/(−) and WT, respectively. As would be expected from these data, metabolic rate (3.0±0.1 vs 2.9±0.2 ml O(2)/g/h) and activity (21.6±4.3 vs 18.5±2.6 beam breaks/min) were unchanged by NKT cell depletion. Furthermore, the degree of insulin resistance, glucose intolerance, liver steatosis, and adipose and liver inflammatory marker expression (TNFα, IL-6, IL-10, IFN-γ, MCP-1, MIP1α) induced by high fat feeding in CD1d(−)/(−) were not different from WT. We conclude that deletion of NKT cells, in the absence of alterations in the CD8(+) T-cell population, is insufficient to protect against the development of the metabolic abnormalities of diet-induced obesity. Public Library of Science 2011-06-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3108591/ /pubmed/21674035 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019831 Text en Mantell et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mantell, Benjamin S.
Stefanovic-Racic, Maja
Yang, Xiao
Dedousis, Nikolas
Sipula, Ian J.
O'Doherty, Robert M.
Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title_full Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title_fullStr Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title_full_unstemmed Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title_short Mice Lacking NKT Cells but with a Complete Complement of CD8(+) T-Cells Are Not Protected against the Metabolic Abnormalities of Diet-Induced Obesity
title_sort mice lacking nkt cells but with a complete complement of cd8(+) t-cells are not protected against the metabolic abnormalities of diet-induced obesity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3108591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21674035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019831
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