期刊
JOURNAL OF LIPID RESEARCH
卷 60, 期 10, 页码 1698-1709出版社
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1194/jlr.R085993
关键词
obesity; adipose tissue; innate immune system; macrophage; eosinophil; innate lymphoid type 2 cell; beiging; homeostasis
资金
- Health Services Research and Development Grant [5I01BX002195]
- American Diabetes Association Innovative Basic Science Award [1-17-IBS-140]
A critical contributor to the health consequences of the obesity epidemic is dysregulated adipose tissue (AT) homeostasis. While white, brown, and beige AT function is altered in obesity-related disease, white AT is marked by progressive inflammation and adipocyte dysfunction and has been the focus of extensive immunometabolism research in the past decade. The exact triggering events initiating and sustaining AT inflammation are still under study, but it has been shown that reducing inflammation improves insulin action in AT. Scientific efforts seeking interventions to mitigate obesity-associated AT inflammation continue, and many groups are now determining how lean healthy AT homeostasis is maintained in order to leverage these mechanisms as therapeutic targets. Such studies have revealed that an elaborate network of immune cells, cytokines, and other cellular mediators coordinate AT function. Recent studies elucidated the involvement of the innate immune system in AT homeostasis (e.g., beiging and insulin sensitivity), including M2-like macrophages, eosinophils, innate lymphoid type 2 cells, and several others. In this review, we summarize the existing literature on innate type 2 inflammation in AT; additionally, we draw attention to areas of debate where seemingly conflicting data promises to yield more surprising and elegant biology as studies continue to dissect AT physiology.
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