4.8 Article

Group 2 innate lymphoid cells promote beiging of white adipose tissue and limit obesity

Journal

NATURE
Volume 519, Issue 7542, Pages 242-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature14115

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI061570, AI074878, AI095466, AI095608, AI102942, AI097333]
  2. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Investigator in Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award
  3. Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America
  4. NIH [F30-AI112023, T32-AI060516, T32-AI007532, KL2-RR024132, DP5OD012116, P01AI06697, F31AG047003, DP2OD007288]
  5. Searle Scholars Award
  6. Penn Diabetes Endocrine Research Center [P30DK19525]
  7. NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center Support Grant [2-P30 CA016520]
  8. NIH/NIDDK P30 Center for Molecular Studies in Digestive and Liver Diseases [P30-DK050306]

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Obesity is an increasingly prevalent disease regulated by genetic and environmental factors. Emerging studies indicate that immune cells, including monocytes, granulocytes and lymphocytes, regulate metabolic homeostasis and are dysregulated in obesity(1,2). Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) can regulate adaptive immunity(3,4) and eosinophil and alternatively activated macrophage responses(5), and were recently identified in murine white adipose tissue (WAT)(5) where they may act to limit the development of obesity(6). However, ILC2s have not been identified inhuman adipose tissue, and the mechanisms by which ILC2s regulate metabolic homeostasis remain unknown. Here we identify ILC2s in human WAT and demonstrate that decreased ILC2 responses in WAT are a conserved characteristic of obesity in humans and mice. Interleukin (IL)-33 was found to be critical for the maintenance of ILC2s in WAT and in limiting adiposity in mice by increasing caloric expenditure. This was associated with recruitment of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1)(+) beige adipocytes in WAT, a process known as beiging or browning that regulates caloric expenditure(7-9). IL-33-induced beiging was dependent on ILC2s, and IL-33 treatment or transfer of IL-33-elicited ILC2s was sufficient to drive beiging independently of the adaptive immune system, eosinophils or IL-4 receptor signalling. We found that ILC2s produce methionine-enkephalin peptides that can act directly on adipocytes to upregulate Ucp1 expression in vitro and that promote beiging in vivo. Collectively, these studies indicate that, in addition to responding to infection or tissue damage, ILC2s can regulate adipose function and metabolic homeostasis in part via production of enkephalin peptides that elicit beiging.

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