Their discovery, published on-line today in the journal Immunity, also finds that although iNKT cells are lost when humans become obese, they can be restored through weight loss, and further suggests that therapies that activate iNKT cells could help manage obesity, diabetes and metabolic disease.
iNKT cells had been thought to be rare in humans until work by Lydia Lynch, PhD, found they were plentiful in human adipose (fat) tissue.
"Our previous work had revealed a large population of iNKT cells in fat tissue in both mice and humans," explains Lynch, a research fellow in the Department of Hematology/Oncology at BIDMC and the study's first author. "Now we have identified them in mice and identified a role for them in the regulation of body weight and the metabolic state, likely by regulating inflammation in adipose tissue." Together with senior author Mark Exley, PhD, Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and a leader in the field of NKT investigations, the team also discovered that a lipid called alpha-galactosylceramide (aGC) can lead to a dramatic improvement in metabolism, weight loss, fatty liver disease and can reverse diabetes by bolstering cells that have been depleted.
Lynch first began this line of investigation in 2007 in her native Ireland, where her work in the Obesity Clinic at St. Vincent's University Hospital in Dublin focused on the immune systems of obese patients. "We knew that not only did obese patients have more heart attacks and a greater incidence of Type 2 diabetes than lean individuals, but they also developed more infections than non-obese individuals," she explains. Blood samples taken from these patients revealed that both NKT cells and iNKT cells were decreased, and subsequent studies of fat tissue from a group of obese patients who had lost weight following bariatric surgery showed that iNKT cells had increased to normal levels.
This data identified candidates for a protective role against the previous findings that adiposity due to diet (and negative energy expenditure) is the trigger for increased inflammation of fat tissue, which subsequently leads to insulin resistance and metabolic disorder. " In obesity, excess lipids lead to larger, stressed fat cells that produce proinflammatory adipokines and cytokines, proteins that trigger an immune response and lead to insulin resistance," explains Lynch.
In this new paper, the authors conducted a series of animal experiments to test their hypothesis that iNKT cells play a physiological role in fat tissue regulation, and thereby protect against the development of inflammation and the metabolic syndrome.
Knowing that mice have iNKT cells in their liver tissue, the authors first ascertained that, like humans, the animals also harbored these cells in fat tissue. "We found loads of them," says Lynch, explaining that the research team next proceeded to put the mice on a high-fat diet (60 percent calories from fat) and studied the outcomes. "Similar to the human subjects we had previously studied, the animals lost their iNKT cells when they became obese," explains Lynch. "Once we took them off this diet and put them back on a normal standard-fat diet, they lost the weight – and their iNKT cells increased."
In the next experiment, the authors set out to better understand the exact role of the iNKT cells by examining two strains of knockout mice, the CD1d-/- and the Ja18-/-, both of which are deficient in iNKT cells.
"We put these knockout mice, and a group of control animals, on high-fat diets," says Lynch. "While all of the animals grew obese, the response in the knockout mice was much more severe in that they grew 30 percent fatter than the control animals and developed the mouse equivalent of Type 2 diabetes very quickly, over just six weeks." The mice also had greatly increased triglyceride levels, larger adipocytes and fatty liver disease.
Next, the authors removed iNKT cells from a normal mouse and injected them into obese NKT knockout mice. "By doing this, we actually reversed the diabetes and even though the mice continued to eat a high-fat diet, they lost one to two grams of weight [normal mouse weight being 20 to 25 grams] and exhibited a host of features that suggested reduced inflammation, including improved insulin sensitivity, lower triglycerides and leptin, and shrunken adipocytes."
Finally, in order to demonstrate if the remaining diminished pool of iNKT cells in obesity could be activated to improve metabolism, the scientists tested alpha-galactosylceramide (aGC), a lipid known to activate iNKT cells. They found that administering a single dose of aGC caused a dramatic improvement in metabolism and fatty liver disease, loss of much of the weight gained, and reversal of diabetes in the obese animals.
"aGC has been tested in clinical trials for the treatment of certain cancers, including melanoma and proven safe and produced few side effects in humans," explains Exley. "The effect of NKT stimulation, whether by aGC or other means, on weight loss, obesity and metabolic disorder has not been investigated until now and may provide a new avenue for the treatment of obesity and metabolic syndrome, which have now reached epidemic proportions worldwide."
In addition to Lynch and Exley, study coauthors include BIDMC investigators Steven Balk, Michael Nowak, Bindu Varghese, Justice Clark and Vasillis Toxavidis; Andrew Hogan and Donal O'Shea of St. Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland; and Cliona O'Farrelly of Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.
INFORMATION: END
Study finds that natural killer T-cells in fat tissue guard against obesity
Discovery expands understanding of immuno-metabolic interactions and the role of inflammation in obesity and diabetes
2012-09-13
(Press-News.org) BOSTON – Invariant natural killer T-cells (iNKT) are a unique subset of immune cells that are known to influence inflammatory responses. Now, a scientific team led by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) has found that iNKT cells play a protective role in guarding against obesity and the metabolic syndrome, a major consequence of obesity.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Gladstone scientists map the genomic blueprint of the heart
2012-09-13
VIDEO:
The video shows beating heart muscle cells, or cardiomyoctes, at day 10 of differentiation.
Click here for more information.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA—September 13, 2012— Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have revealed the precise order and timing of hundreds of genetic "switches" required to construct a fully functional heart from embryonic heart cells—providing new clues into the genetic basis for some forms of congenital heart disease.
In a study being published ...
Missing pieces of DNA structure is a red flag for deadly skin cancer
2012-09-13
BOSTON, MA—Melanoma is the most dangerous type of skin cancer and is the leading cause of death from skin disease. Rates are steadily increasing, and although risk increases with age, melanoma is now frequently seen in young people.
But what if we could pinpoint when seemingly innocuous skin pigment cells mutate into melanoma? Researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) have achieved this. Teams led by Yujiang Geno Shi, PhD, from BWH's Department of Medicine, and George F. Murphy, MD, from BWH's Department of Pathology have discovered a new biomarker for the lethal ...
In lung cancer, smokers have 10 times more genetic damage than never-smokers
2012-09-13
AUDIO:
Lung cancer patients with a history of smoking have 10 times more genetic mutations in their tumors than those with the disease who have never smoked, according to a new...
Click here for more information.
Lung cancer patients with a history of smoking have 10 times more genetic mutations in their tumors than those with the disease who have never smoked, according to a new study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
"None of us were surprised that ...
World's hottest temperature cools a bit
2012-09-13
TEMPE, Ariz. – If you think this summer was hot, it's nothing compared to the summer of 1913, when the hottest temperature ever recorded was a searing 134 F in Death Valley, Calif. But while that reading was made 99 years ago, it is only being recognized today by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) as the most extreme temperature ever recorded.
That's because an international team of meteorologists recently finished an in-depth investigation of what had been the world-record temperature extreme of 58 C (136.4 F), recorded on Sept. 13, 1922 in El Azizia, Libya. ...
Whitehead scientists bring new efficiency to stem cell reprogramming
2012-09-13
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (September 13, 2012) – Several years ago, biologists discovered that regular body cells can be reprogrammed into pluripotent stem cells — cells with the ability to become any other type of cell. Such cells hold great promise for treating many human diseases.
These induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are usually created by genetically modifying cells to overexpress four genes that make them revert to an immature, embryonic state. However, the procedure works in only a small percentage of cells.
Now, new genetic markers identified by researchers at ...
URMC geneticists verify cholesterol-cancer link
2012-09-13
University of Rochester Medical Center scientists discovered new genetic evidence linking cholesterol and cancer, raising the possibility that cholesterol medications could be useful in the future for cancer prevention or to augment existing cancer treatment.
The data, published in the online journal Cell Reports, support several recent population-based studies that suggest individuals who take cholesterol-lowering drugs may have a reduced risk of cancer, and, conversely that individuals with the highest levels of cholesterol seem to have an elevated risk of cancer.
The ...
Immune system compensates for 'leaky gut' in inflammatory bowel disease susceptibility
2012-09-13
New research could clarify how inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), conditions that include ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, are triggered and develop.
Scientists at Emory University School of Medicine have shown how the immune system can compensate for a "leaky gut" and prevent disease in mice that are susceptible to intestinal inflammation. These findings could explain why some individuals who are susceptible to developing IBD do or do not get the disease.
The results will be published online Sept. 13 in the journal Immunity.
"Our results suggest that when ...
Perceived control affects complication rates in patients with acute coronary syndrome
2012-09-13
Patients admitted to hospital with obstructed heart arteries were three times more likely to experience complications when they were in hospital if they felt they were not in control of their condition, according to research published in the October issue of the Journal of Advanced Nursing.
However, persistent anxiety on its own appeared to have little effect on whether patients experienced complications or not.
Researchers looked at 171 patients admitted to hospitals in the USA, Australia and New Zealand with acute coronary syndrome (ACS), following them for two years. ...
Migratory moths profit from their journey
2012-09-13
It isn't only birds that move south as autumn approaches. Some insects also live their lives on the same principle. A new study of migratory insects has just been published that shows that a considerably higher number of insects survive and migrate back south in the autumn than was previously believed.
"These results are really exciting, because we have managed to show that it really is profitable for insects to migrate north at the start of the summer", says Lars Pettersson, a Reader at the Department of Biology, Lund University, Sweden.
The findings help to fundamentally ...
Maturitas publishes clinical guide on low-dose vaginal estrogens for vaginal atrophy
2012-09-13
Amsterdam, September 12, 2012 - Elsevier, a world-leading provider of scientific, technical and medical information products and services, announced today the publication of a position statement by the European Menopause and Andropause Society (EMAS) in the journal Maturitas. The society published a clinical guide on low-dose vaginal estrogens for postmenopausal vaginal atrophy also including a summary of recommendations.
Vaginal atrophy is common after menopause and adversely affects quality of life in one out of every two women. This guide provides the evidence for ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Cercus electric stimulation enables cockroach with trajectory control and spatial cognition training
Day-long conference addresses difficult to diagnose lung disease
First-ever cardiogenic shock academy features simulation lab
Thirty-year mystery of dissonance in the “ringing” of black holes explained
Less intensive works best for agricultural soil
Arctic rivers project receives “national champion” designation from frontiers foundation
Computational biology paves the way for new ALS tests
Study offers new hope for babies born with opioid withdrawal syndrome
UT, Volkswagen Group of America celebrate research partnership
New Medicare program could dramatically improve affordability for cancer drugs – if patients enroll
Are ‘zombie’ skin cells harmful or helpful? The answer may be in their shapes
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center presents research at AACR 2025
Head and neck, breast, lung and survivorship studies headline Dana-Farber research at AACR Annual Meeting 2025
AACR: Researchers share promising results from MD Anderson clinical trials
New research explains why our waistlines expand in middle age
Advancements in muon detection: Taishan Antineutrino Observatory's innovative top veto tracker
Chips off the old block
Microvascular decompression combined with nerve combing for atypical trigeminal neuralgia
Cutting the complexity from digital carpentry
Lung immune cell type “quietly” controls inflammation in COVID-19
Fiscal impact of expanded Medicare coverage for GLP-1 receptor agonists to treat obesity
State and sociodemographic trends in US cigarette smoking with future projections
Young adults drive historic decline in smoking
NFCR congratulates Dr. Robert C. Bast, Jr. on receiving the AACR-Daniel D. Von Hoff Award for Outstanding Contributions to Education and Training in Cancer Research
Chimpanzee stem cells offer new insights into early embryonic development
This injected protein-like polymer helps tissues heal after a heart attack
FlexTech inaugural issue launches, pioneering interdisciplinary innovation in flexible technology
In Down syndrome mice, 40Hz light and sound improve cognition, neurogenesis, connectivity
Methyl eugenol: potential to inhibit oxidative stress, address related diseases, and its toxicological effects
A vascularized multilayer chip reveals shear stress-induced angiogenesis in diverse fluid conditions
[Press-News.org] Study finds that natural killer T-cells in fat tissue guard against obesityDiscovery expands understanding of immuno-metabolic interactions and the role of inflammation in obesity and diabetes