Context-dependent roles of sex hormone signaling in controlling visceral adipose tissue Treg heterogeneity and clonal expansion
Cody Elkins, Jianliang Zhang, Chengyu Ye, Samara Moll, M Neale Weitzmann, Chaoran Li

TL;DR
Sex hormones influence immune cells in fat tissue, affecting metabolic health differently in males and females.
Contribution
The study reveals how sex hormone disruption affects Treg clonality in female fat tissue and its link to metabolic diseases.
Findings
ERα deficiency promotes clonal expansion of ST2+ oVAT Tregs in lean female mice.
Obesity and ERα deficiency reduce ST2+ oVAT Tregs, increasing inflammation and insulin resistance.
Sex hormones have diet-dependent roles in regulating oVAT Tregs and metabolic risk in females.
Abstract
Sex hormones are important for maintaining metabolic health. Females with low estrogen or high androgen levels exhibit an elevated risk for developing obesity-associated metabolic syndromes. Chronic low-grade inflammation in the visceral adipose tissue (VAT) is a major contributor to metabolic dysfunction during obesity. However, how sex hormones impact the VAT inflammatory environment to curtail obesity-associated pathology remain incompletely understood. Regulatory T cells (Tregs) expressing a clonally expanded T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire and high levels of the IL-33 receptor ST2 are highly enriched in male epididymal VAT (eVAT), in which they suppress tissue inflammation and protect against metabolic diseases. While TCR specificity and activation are critical for the accumulation of ST2+ eVAT Tregs in males, the factors governing Treg clonality in female ovarian VAT (oVAT) and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIL-33, ST2, and ILC Pathways · Adipokines, Inflammation, and Metabolic Diseases · Reproductive System and Pregnancy
