iScience (Mar 2024)

Fat-to-blood recirculation of partially dysfunctional PD-1+CD4 Tconv cells is associated with dysglycemia in human obesity

  • Anna Giovenzana,
  • Eugenia Bezzecchi,
  • Anita Bichisecchi,
  • Sara Cardellini,
  • Francesca Ragogna,
  • Federica Pedica,
  • Federica Invernizzi,
  • Luigi Di Filippo,
  • Valentina Tomajer,
  • Francesca Aleotti,
  • Giulia M. Scotti,
  • Carlo Socci,
  • Giovanni Cesana,
  • Stefano Olmi,
  • Marco J. Morelli,
  • Massimo Falconi,
  • Andrea Giustina,
  • Chiara Bonini,
  • Lorenzo Piemonti,
  • Eliana Ruggiero,
  • Alessandra Petrelli

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 3
p. 109032

Abstract

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Summary: Obesity is characterized by the accumulation of T cells in insulin-sensitive tissues, including the visceral adipose tissue (VAT), that can interfere with the insulin signaling pathway eventually leading to insulin resistance (IR) and type 2 diabetes. Here, we found that PD-1+CD4 conventional T (Tconv) cells, endowed with a transcriptomic and functional profile of partially dysfunctional cells, are diminished in VAT of obese patients with dysglycemia (OB-Dys), without a concomitant increase in apoptosis. These cells showed enhanced capacity to recirculate into the bloodstream and had a non-restricted TCRβ repertoire divergent from that of normoglycemic obese and lean individuals. PD-1+CD4 Tconv were reduced in the circulation of OB-Dys, exhibited an altered migration potential, and were detected in the liver of patients with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. The findings suggest a potential role for partially dysfunctional PD-1+CD4 Tconv cells as inter-organ mediators of IR in obese patients with dysglycemic.

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