4.7 Article

Obesity Decreases B Cell Responses in Young and Elderly Individuals

Journal

OBESITY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 615-625

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/oby.21383

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [AG32576, AI096446, AG042826]

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Objective: To evaluate the effects of obesity-associated inflammation on influenza vaccine responses. Methods: In young and elderly individuals, both lean and with obesity, antibody responses to influenza vaccination were measured. Results: A decrease in in vivo vaccine responses, circulating switched memory, and transitional B cells and an increase in pro-inflammatory late/exhausted memory B cells were found. In vitro B cell function was measured by activation-induced cytidine deaminase and E47, markers of optimal antibody responses. Moreover, IL-6 production was increased, whereas IL-10 production was decreased in cultures of B cells from individuals with obesity. Markers of immune activation (TNF-alpha, TLR4, micro-RNAs) in unstinnulated B cells were also found increased and were negatively correlated with B cell function. In order to reveal potential mechanisms, we stimulated B cells from lean individuals in vitro with leptin, the adipokine increased in obesity. Leptin increased phospho-STAT3, crucial for TNF-alpha production, and decreased phospho-AMPK, the energy sensing enzyme upstream of phospho-p38 MAPK and E47. Leptin-induced phospho-STAT3 and phospho-AMPK levels were similar to those in B cells from individuals with obesity. Conclusions: These results demonstrate that leptin can be responsible for decreased B cell function in obesity.

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