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/ Health News / 2008 / October 2008 / October 8, 2008 Killing angry immune cells in fat may help fight diabetes |
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Researchers have shown that they can rapidly reverse insulin resistance in obese mice - by killing off angry immune cells that take up residence in obese fat and muscle tissue.According to the researchers, the findings suggest that treatments aimed at specific subsets of the so-called macrophage cells might offer a very effective new antidiabetic therapy.
Washington, Oct 8 : Researchers have shown that they can rapidly reverse insulin resistance in obese mice - by killing off 'angry' immune cells that take up residence in obese fat and muscle tissue.According to the researchers, the findings suggest that treatments aimed at specific subsets of the so-called macrophage cells might offer a very effective new antidiabetic therapy.
" We used a genetic 'trick' that allowed us to rapidly kill these macrophages. The treatment killed these cells within hours, and insulin resistance simply reversed itself. It argues strongly that macrophages are causative for the inflammation that leads to diabetes [in those who are obese]," said Jerrold Olefsky of the University of California, San Diego.
Jaap Neels of INSERM in France, who led the work while in Olefsky's lab, added: "The most interesting thing is that this reversal occurs very rapidly. Twenty-four hours later the animals' insulin response had completely normalized. They were still obese, but no longer insulin resistant."
Neels said that the strategy used in the obese mice wouldn't translate to the clinic directly. It's also unclear whether or not it is the same subtype of macrophage cells that invade fat tissue in people who are obese.
However, the findings suggest that you would not necessarily need to target all macrophages to have a beneficial effect on the diseases associated with obesity. That's critical because "you don't want to knock out the whole immune system."
The researchers recently found that a specific subset of macrophages invades obese fat and muscle tissue. Although little was known about them, those macrophages are defined by a CD11c marker expressed on their surfaces.
They also produce high levels of proinflammatory chemicals that are linked to the development of obesity-associated insulin resistance.
In the new study, the researchers tested the idea that killing those cells would reverse the inflammatory symptoms that come with obesity using a mouse model developed earlier in which the CD11c-expressing macrophages were artificially made susceptible to diphtheria toxin.
They found that treatment with the toxin not only reversed the animals' resistance to insulin, but also led to a marked decline in inflammatory signs through the body. The treated animals showed a decline in the CD11c macrophages in both fat and muscle.
" It shows that high triglycerides in muscle don't necessarily have to lead to insulin resistance as it has been thought-as long as the high lipid levels aren't accompanied by inflammation," Neels said.
The obese mice also had less fat in their livers, an important find given the epidemic of obesity-associated fatty liver disease.
Neels said that if a unique marker can be identified on the macrophages found in human fat tissue, a drug could be designed to take advantage of those features to bind and kill them,
The study is published in the October Cell Metabolism, a publication of Cell Press.
ANI