F4/80hiCCR2hi macrophage infiltration into the intra-abdominal fat worsens the severity of experimental IBD in obese mice with DSS colitis
View/Open
Author
Publication date
2009ISSN
1751-4991
Abstract
Background & aims: Intra-abdominal fat is pathogenically involved in both type 2 diabetes and
inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, little is known about the interrelationships between these
two widespread and devastating diseases. The goal of this study is to investigate the effect of obesity in
the severity of colitis and, in turn, examine the impact of IBD on glucose tolerance during obesity. In this
context, we have explored the role of infiltrating macrophages in the severity of diabetes and IBD.
Methods: The infiltration of macrophages and T cells into intra-abdominal WAT, liver and the colonic
lamina propria was examined in db/db and lean mice after a 7-day dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) challenge
by tissue fractionation and flow cytometry. Disease activity indices (DAI), weight loss and colonic
histology were examined during the course of the DSS challenge, and colonic pro-inflammatory cytokine
expression was quantified by real-time RT-PCR. To determine the impact of obesity and intestinal
inflammation on glucose tolerance, mice were administered an intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test.
Results: We found that obesity increases the severity of experimental IBD. Following a DSS challenge,
obese mice express greater concentrations of colonic TNF-a mRNA than lean mice. In addition, experimental
IBD in combination with obesity worsens glucose tolerance beyond the effect caused by obesity
alone. F4/80hiCCR2hi macrophages infiltrate the lamina propria of mice with DSS colitis and the WAT of
obese mice.
Conclusions: Infiltration of F4/80hiCCR2hi macrophages into intra-abdominal fat worsens the severity of
experimental IBD during obesity. In turn, experimental IBD in obese mice repressed skeletal muscle PPAR
g and GLUT4 mRNA expression, upregulated MCP-1 and worsened type 2 diabetes.
Document Type
Article
Language
English
Keywords
Diabetis no-insulinodependent
Obesitat
Inflamació
Pages
8 p.
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Bassaganya Riera, J., Ferrer, G., Casagran, O., Sanchez, S., de Horna, A., Duran, E., . . . Hontecillas, R. (2009). F4/80hiCCR2hi macrophage infiltration into the intra-abdominal fat worsens the severity of experimental IBD in obese mice with DSS colitis. e-SPEN, 4(2), e90-e97. doi:10.1016/j.eclnm.2008.11.005
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Articles [1389]
Rights
(c) 2008 Elsevier. Published article is available at: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.eclnm.2008.11.005