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Human epicardial adipose tissue contains innate and adaptive lymphoid cells and a higher proportion of innate type 2 lymphoid cells compared to other adipose tissues - 18/06/24

Doi : 10.1016/j.ando.2024.05.009 
Elisa Doukbi a, Patricia Ancel a, Anne Dutour a, b, Astrid Soghomonian a, b, Shaista Ahmed a, c, Victoria Castejon a, Christelle Piperoglou d, Vlad Gariboldi a, e, Marien Lenoir f, Eric Lechevallier g, Bastien Gondran-Tellier g, Romain Boissier g, Mikael Ebbo d, h, Frédéric Vély d, Bénédicte Gaborit a, b,
a Aix Marseille University, Inserm, INRAE, C2VN, Marseille, France 
b Department of Endocrinology, Metabolic Diseases and Nutrition, Pôle ENDO, AP–HM, 13005 Marseille, France 
c Heart repair and regeneration laboratory, Department EMC, Faculty of Sciences and Medicine, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland 
d Aix Marseille University, CNRS, Inserm, CIML, Timone Hospital, AP–HM, Marseille Immunopôle, Marseille, France 
e Department of Cardiac Surgery, Timone Hospital, AP–HM, Marseille, France 
f Division of Paediatric Cardiac Surgery, Timone Hospital, AP–HM, Marseille, France 
g Department of Urology surgery, La Conception Hospital, AP–HM, Marseille, France 
h Internal Medicine Department, Timone Hospital, AP–HM, Marseille, France 

Corresponding author. Aix Marseille University, Inserm, INRAE, C2VN, Marseille, France.Aix Marseille University, Inserm, INRAE, C2VNMarseilleFrance

Abstract

Importance

Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is a biologically active organ surrounding myocardium and coronary arteries that has been associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) and atrial fibrillation. Previous work has shown that EAT exhibits beige features.

Objective

Our objective was to determine whether the stromal vascular fraction of the human EAT contains innate or adaptive lymphoid cells compared to thoracic subcutaneous (thSAT), visceral abdominal (VAT) and subcutaneous abdominal (abSAT).

Participants

New pangenomic microarray analysis was performed on previous transcriptomic dataset using significance analysis of microarray and ingenuity pathway analysis (n=41) to identify specific immune signature and its link with browning genes. EAT, thSAT, VAT and abSAT samples from explanted patients with severe cardiomyopathies and multi-organ donor patients (n=17) were used for flow cytometry (FC) immunophenotyping assay. Patients were on average 55±16 years-old; 47% had hypertension and 6% CAD. Phenotypic adaptive and innate immune profiles were performed using a TBNK panel and a specific ILC1-2-3 panel including CD127, CD117, CRTH2 (CD294) and activation markers such as CD25 and CD69.

Results

Transcriptomic analysis showed a significant positive correlation between the TH2 immune pathway (IL-4, IL-5, IL-13, IL-25, IL-33) and browning genes (UCP-1, PRDM16, TMEM26, CITED1, TBX1) in EAT versus thSAT (R=0.82, P<0.0001). Regarding adaptive immune cells, a preponderance of CD8T cells, a contingent of CD4T cells, and a few B cells were observed in all ATs (P<0.0001). In innate lymphoid cells (ILCs), an increase was observed in visceral ATs (i.e. EAT; VAT 35±8ILCs/g of tissue) compared to their subcutaneous counterpart (i.e. thSAT+abSAT: 8±3 ILCs/g of AT, P=0.002), with a difference in the proportion of the 3 subtypes of ILCs (ILC1>ILC3>ILC2). In addition, we observed an increase in EAT-ILC2 compared to other ATs and almost all these EAT-ILC2 expressed CD69 and/or CD25 activation markers (99.75±0.16%; P<0.0001). We also observed more NKs in EAT and VAT (1520±71 cells/g of AT) than in SATs (562±17 cells/g of AT); P=0.01.

Conclusion

This is the first study to provide a comparison between innate and adaptive lymphoid cells in human epicardial versus abdominal or thoracic adipose tissues. Further studies are ongoing to decipher whether these cells could be involved in EAT beiging.

Trial Registration

CODECOH No. DC-2021-4518 The French agency of biomedicine PFS21-005.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Adipose tissues, Browning genes, Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT), Type-2 innate lymphoid cells


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Vol 85 - N° 3

P. 226-230 - juin 2024 Regresar al número
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