Abstract
In the US and globally, dramatic increases in the prevalence of adult and childhood obesity have been reported during the last 30 years. In addition to cardiovascular disease, type II diabetes, and liver disease, obesity has recently been recognized as an important risk factor for influenza pneumonia. During the influenza pandemic of 2009, obese individuals experienced a greater severity of illness from the H1N1 virus. In addition, obese mice have also been shown to exhibit increased lethality and aberrant pulmonary inflammatory responses following influenza infection. In contrast to influenza, the impact of obesity on bacterial pneumonia in human patients is controversial. In this report, we compared the responses of lean WT and obese CPEfat/fat mice following an intratracheal infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae, the leading cause of community-acquired pneumonia. At 16 weeks of age, CPEfat/fat mice develop severe obesity, hyperglycemia, elevated serum triglycerides and leptin, and increased blood neutrophil counts. There were no differences between lean WT and obese CPEfat/fat mice in survival or lung and spleen bacterial burdens following intratracheal infection with S. pneumoniae. Besides a modest increase in TNF-α levels and increased peripheral blood neutrophil counts in CPEfat/fat mice, there were not differences in lung or serum cytokines after infection. These results suggest that obesity, accompanied by hyperglycemia and modestly elevated triglycerides, at least in the case of CPEfat/fat mice, does not impair innate immunity against pneumococcal pneumonia.
Highlights
The prevalence of obesity has increased dramatically during the last three decades with 35 percent of the US adult population having a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg/m2 or greater [1]
The CPEfat/fat mouse is obese and hyperglycemic with elevated triglycerides, leptin, and peripheral white blood cell (WBC) and PMN counts when maintained on a normal chow diet at 16 wks of age
We compared the responses of lean and obese CPEfat/fat mice following an intratracheal challenge with S. pneumoniae
Summary
The prevalence of obesity has increased dramatically during the last three decades with 35 percent of the US adult population having a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg/m2 or greater [1]. The obese were disproportionately represented among influenza-associated hospitalizations and deaths [9]. This association between obesity and severity of illness and death from H1N1 influenza has been confirmed by many other reports [10,11,12,13,14]. It appears that obesity is a risk factor for severity of illness from other strains of influenza and viral pathogens known to infect the respiratory tract [15,16]. Whether or not obesity is associated with a greater severity of illness with bacterial pneumonia is less certain [6,19]
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