Abstract
Although individuals with obesity are susceptible to infection, the underlying causes have not been fully identified. To investigate whether obesity affects immunity, we studied subjects with isolated obesity. Thirty-four obese persons from our outpatient obesity clinic and 50 nonobese healthy control subjects were studied. The effects of weight reduction were evaluated in obese subjects on a very-low-energy diet. We examined blastogenic response, lymphocyte subsets, circulatory TNF-alpha, soluble TNF-alpha receptor 1, soluble TNF-alpha receptor 2, and in vitro TNF-alpha production in obesity. Lymphocyte subsets were analysed with flowcytometry. TNF-alpha and soluble TNF receptors levels were assayed using commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits. Blastogenic responses to phytohemagglutinin or concanavalin A of T cells, CD3(+), CD4(+), CD8(+), CD4(+)CD45RO(+), and TCR alpha beta T cells were significantly diminished in obese subjects. Strong negative correlations were observed between TCR alpha beta and body weight and BMI in obese subjects. Circulatory levels of TNF-alpha, soluble TNF-alpha receptors, and in vitro TNF-alpha production were significantly increased compared to nonobese subjects. In obese subjects, there were significant positive correlations between serum levels of TNF-alpha and waist-hip ratio, serum levels of soluble TNF-alpha receptor 1 and body weight, soluble TNF-alpha receptor 2 and BMI, and soluble TNF-alpha receptor 2 and waist-hip ratio. The T cell responses and previously reduced non-CD8 T cell subsets were increased significantly following weight reduction. Our results suggest that subsets of T cell populations and their function may be reduced in human obesity, and that this may be related, at least in part, to the elevated TNF-alpha production. Furthermore, this T cell dysfunction can be recovered by adequate weight reduction.
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