Effects of Bariatric Surgery-Related Weight Loss on the Characteristics, Metabolism, and Immunomodulation of Adipose Stromal/Stem Cells in a Follow-Up Study
Amna Adnan, Miia Juntunen, Tuula Tyrväinen, Minna Kelloniemi, Laura Kummola, Reija Autio, Mimmi Patrikoski, Susanna Miettinen

TL;DR
Weight loss after bariatric surgery improves the metabolic and immunological properties of fat-derived stem cells, but not fully restoring their anti-inflammatory functions.
Contribution
This study is the first to show how weight loss affects the immunomodulatory capacity of adipose stem cells in a longitudinal design.
Findings
Weight loss reduced leptin and increased adiponectin, improved mitochondrial function, and decreased adipocyte size.
Weight loss downregulated proinflammatory genes and cytokines in ASC monocultures but increased proinflammatory properties in macrophage cocultures.
ASCs from weight-reduced donors showed improved immunosuppressive functions in macrophage cocultures, but not full recovery.
Abstract
Background: The success of adipose stromal/stem cell (ASC)-based therapies may depend on donor characteristics such as body mass index (BMI). A high BMI may negatively impact the therapeutic potential of ASCs, but the effects of weight loss on ASC-mediated immunoregulation have not been extensively studied. Methods: ASCs were obtained from donors with obesity (obASCs) undergoing bariatric surgery and from the same donors after weight loss (wlASCs). Plasma samples, adipose tissue histology, and ASC characteristics, such as mitochondrial respiration and inflammatory factors, were studied before and after weight loss. The immunomodulatory capacity of ob/wlASCs was evaluated in cocultures with prepolarized and preactivated proinflammatory (M1) and anti-inflammatory (M2) macrophages by determining macrophage surface markers, gene expression, and cytokine secretion. Results: Weight loss…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · Mesenchymal stem cell research · Body Contouring and Surgery
