Abstract

Obesity promotes excessive inflammation, which is associated with senescence-like changes in visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and the development of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and cardiovascular diseases. We have reported that a unique population of CD44hi CD62Llo CD4+ T cells that constitutively express PD-1 and CD153 exhibit cellular senescence and cause VAT inflammation by producing large amounts of osteopontin. Weight loss improves glycemic control and reduces cardiovascular disease risk factors, but its long-term effects on cardiovascular events and longevity in obese individuals with T2DM are somewhat disappointing and not well understood. High-fat diet (HFD)-fed obese mice were subjected to weight reduction through a switch to a control diet. They lost body weight and visceral fat mass, reaching the same levels as lean mice fed a control diet. However, the VAT of weight reduction mice exhibited denser infiltration of macrophages, which formed more crown-like structures compared to the VAT of obese mice kept on the HFD. Mechanistically, CD153+ PD-1+ CD4+ T cells are long-lived and not easily eliminated, even after weight reduction. Their continued presence maintains a self-sustaining chronic inflammatory loop via production of large amounts of osteopontin. Thus, we concluded that T-cell senescence is essentially a negative legacy effect of obesity.

Highlights

  • Weight loss is recommended for overweight and obese individuals with T2DM

  • Our results indicated that obesity accelerates T-cell senescence in visceral adipose tissue (VAT), and senescent CD153+PD1+CD44hiCD4+ T cells play a key role in the development and maintenance of chronic inflammation of VAT by producing large amounts of OPN

  • At 30 weeks of age, by which point the High-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice had developed severe obesity, half of the HFD-fed obese mice were switched to the control diet to induce weight reduction

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Summary

Introduction

Weight loss is recommended for overweight and obese individuals with T2DM. Weight loss improves glycemic control and reduces cardiovascular disease risk factors, but epidemiological studies examining the long-term effects of weight reduction on cardiovascular events and the longevity of obese individuals with T2DM have yielded conflicting results. Adoptive transfer of CD153+PD-1+CD44hiCD4+ T cells from HFD-fed WT, but not Spp1-deficient, mice into the VAT of lean mice fed a normal diet recapitulated the essential features of VAT inflammation and insulin resistance.

Results
Conclusion
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