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Obesity and Insulin Resistance Promote Atherosclerosis through an IFNγ-Regulated Macrophage Protein Network.

Citation
Reardon, C. A., et al. “Obesity And Insulin Resistance Promote Atherosclerosis Through An Ifnγ-Regulated Macrophage Protein Network.”. Cell Reports, pp. 3021-3030.
Center University of Chicago University of Washington
Multicenter
Multicenter
Author Catherine A Reardon, Amulya Lingaraju, Kelly Q Schoenfelt, Guolin Zhou, Chang Cui, Hannah Jacobs-El, Ilona Babenko, Andrew Hoofnagle, Daniel Czyz, Howard Shuman, Tomas Vaisar, Lev Becker
Keywords IFN-gamma, altherosclerosis, cholesterol, foam cells, Insulin resistance, macrophages, obesity, proteomics, type 2 diabetes
Abstract

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is associated with increased risk for atherosclerosis; however, the mechanisms underlying this relationship are poorly understood. Macrophages, which are activated in T2D and causatively linked to atherogenesis, are an attractive mechanistic link. Here, we use proteomics to show that diet-induced obesity and insulin resistance (obesity/IR) modulate a pro-atherogenic "macrophage-sterol-responsive-network" (MSRN), which, in turn, predisposes macrophages to cholesterol accumulation. We identify IFNγ as the mediator of obesity/IR-induced MSRN dysregulation and increased macrophage cholesterol accumulation and show that obesity/IR primes T cells to increase IFNγ production. Accordingly, myeloid cell-specific deletion of the IFNγ receptor (Ifngr1-/-) restores MSRN proteins, attenuates macrophage cholesterol accumulation and atherogenesis, and uncouples the strong relationship between hyperinsulinemia and aortic root lesion size in hypercholesterolemic Ldlr-/- mice with obesity/IR, but does not affect these parameters in Ldlr-/- mice without obesity/IR. Collectively, our findings identify an IFNγ-macrophage pathway as a mechanistic link between obesity/IR and accelerated atherogenesis.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
23
Issue
10
Number of Pages
3021-3030
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2211-1247
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2018.05.010
Alternate Journal
Cell Rep
PMID
29874587
PMCID
PMC6082182
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