Abstract

The cardiometabolic syndrome involves a clustering of metabolic and cardiovascular factors which increase the risk of patients developing both Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and cardio/cerebrovascular disease. Although the mechanistic underpinnings of this link remain uncertain, key factors include insulin resistance, excess visceral adiposity, atherogenic dyslipidemia, and endothelial dysfunction. Of these, a state of resistance to insulin action in overweight/obese patients appears to be central to the pathophysiologic process. Given the increasing prevalence of obesity-related Type 2 Diabetes, coupled with the fact that cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of mortality in this patient population, a more thorough understanding of the cardiometabolic syndrome and potential options to mitigate its risk is imperative. Inherent in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance is an underlying state of chronic inflammation, at least partly in response to excess adiposity. Within obese adipose tissue, an immunomodulatory shift occurs, involving a preponderance of pro-inflammatory immune cells and cytokines/adipokines, along with antigen presentation by adipocytes. Therefore, various adipokines differentially expressed by obese adipocytes may have a significant effect on cardiometabolism. Clusterin is a molecular chaperone that is widely produced by many tissues throughout the body, but is also preferentially overexpressed by obese compared lean adipocytes and relates strongly to multiple components of the cardiometabolic syndrome. Herein, we summarize the known and potential roles of circulating and adipocyte-specific clusterin in cardiometabolism and discuss potential further investigations to determine if clusterin is a viable target to attenuate both metabolic and cardiovascular disease.

Highlights

  • The exact diagnostic criteria varies [1,2,3], the metabolic syndrome involves a clustering of abnormalities including obesity, insulin resistance, hypertension, and dyslipidemia

  • These in turn heighten the risk of cardio- and cerebrovascular disease (CVD) [elevated risk of primary and recurrent stroke [4] and myocardial infarction [5]], Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2D) [6, 7], and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease/steatohepatitis (NAFLD/non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)) [8]

  • In adipose tissue (AT), macrophages play a central role [28, 31, 32]; recent studies have highlighted the importance of several other key immune cells in maintaining lean AT, including immunosuppressive regulatory T (Treg) cells, which contribute to a “Type 2” anti-inflammatory immunoenvironment [33, 34]

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Summary

Jennifer Wittwer and David Bradley*

D. Purvis, University of Oxford, United Kingdom Antonios Chatzigeorgiou, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece. The cardiometabolic syndrome involves a clustering of metabolic and cardiovascular factors which increase the risk of patients developing both Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and cardio/cerebrovascular disease. A state of resistance to insulin action in overweight/obese patients appears to be central to the pathophysiologic process. Given the increasing prevalence of obesity-related Type 2 Diabetes, coupled with the fact that cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of mortality in this patient population, a more thorough understanding of the cardiometabolic syndrome and potential options to mitigate its risk is imperative. Inherent in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance is an underlying state of chronic inflammation, at least partly in response to excess adiposity.

INTRODUCTION
Blood pressure Other
CHARACTERISTICS OF CLUSTERIN AND PHYSIOLOGIC ROLES
ROLE OF CIRCULATING CLUSTERIN IN INSULIN RESISTANCE AND METABOLIC DISEASE
CARDIOVASCULAR AND CEREBROVASCULAR EFFECTS OF CIRCULATING CLUSTERIN
Findings
CONCLUSION
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