| November 29, 2004
Resistin Integral Part of the
Inflammatory Response
Findings Further Link Inflammation, Obesity,
and Type-2 Diabetes
(Philadelphia, PA) – Chronic inflammation is
being implicated in diseases as widespread as cancer,
heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and most recently,
diabetes and obesity. The role of the hormone resistin
in people with these diseases has been questioned because
it is primarily secreted by immune cells called macrophages
in humans rather than fat cells, as in mice. Nevertheless,
resistin is elevated in some people with diabetes and
obesity. Higher levels of resistin are associated with
insulin resistance. But what is the connection among
inflammation, insulin resistance, and obesity?
Insulin resistance, which occurs when muscle, fat, and
liver cells fail to use insulin effectively to regulate
blood sugar, usually precedes type-2 diabetes and is
part of metabolic syndrome. A new study from the laboratory
of Mitch Lazar, MD, PhD, Chief of the
Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism at
the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine,
has found that by simulating inflammation in human macrophages
and patients levels of resistin substantially increase.
In people, the resistin level in blood increases by
about 400 percent. “This suggests that resistin
is part of the inflammatory process,” says Lazar.
“This leads us to hypothesize that human resistin
also contributes to insulin resistance.” He and
colleagues published their findings in the November
30 issue of PloS, Medicine.
Since several inflammatory molecules called cytokines
are increased in the blood of people with obesity, the
human body seems to react in the same way to wounds
and infections as it does to obesity. This may mean
that obesity in humans causes immune cells like macrophages
to overproduce resistin in reaction to the cytokines,
thereby promoting diabetes through insulin resistance.
The Lazar team also treated human macrophages with endotoxin,
a product of bacteria that stimulates inflammation.
Resistin levels increased forty-fold in cell cultures
of these immune cells. Cytokines were required for the
increase in resistin in the presence of endotoxin. “That
told us that cytokines like TNF-alpha and IL-6 are responsible
for the increase in resistin in macrophages,”
explains Lazar.
The cytokines are probably coming from fat cells, as
well as from macrophages, he speculates. Earlier in
2004, other research groups found more macrophages in
the fat tissue of obese people compared to non-obese.
Resistin is being marshaled for some reason. “Our
work suggests that the increases in resistin seen in
people is related to the increase in cytokines,”
says Lazar. “The hypothesis is that there’s
cross-talk between fat cells and macrophages via cytokines,
both in mouse and humans.”
These studies demonstrate that blood levels of resistin
are a marker for inflammatory disease, and suggest a
potential causative role for resistin in the insulin
resistance that is seen in patients with serious bacterial
infections known as sepsis. Earlier studies from other
laboratories have shown that such patients benefit from
insulin treatment. Research is ongoing to address whether
treatments that lower resistin levels would be similarly
beneficial.
This research was funded in part by the National Institutes
of Health. Other Penn investigators contributing this
research are: Michael Lehrke, Muredach P. Reilly, Segan
C. Millington, Nayyar Iqbal, and Daniel J. Rader.
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a printer friendly version of this release,
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