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CD8+ T cells induce cachexia during chronic viral infection

Authors :
Haifeng Xu
Michael Moschinger
Andreas Bergthaler
Thomas Scherer
Hatoon Baazim
Lindsay Kosack
Martina Schweiger
Alexandra Popa
Alan Aderem
Adnan Ali
Suchira Gallage
Alexander Lercher
Philipp A. Lang
Kseniya Khamina
Doron Merkler
Rudolf Zechner
Joachim Friske
Mark J. Smyth
Bojan Vilagos
Mathias Heikenwalder
Thomas H. Helbich
Source :
Nature Immunology, Nature Immunology, Vol. 20, No 6 (2019) pp. 701-710, Nature immunology

Abstract

Cachexia represents a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in various cancers, chronic inflammation and infections. Understanding of the mechanisms that drive cachexia has remained limited, especially for infection-associated cachexia (IAC). In the present paper we describe a model of reversible cachexia in mice with chronic viral infection and identify an essential role for CD8+ T cells in IAC. Cytokines linked to cancer-associated cachexia did not contribute to IAC. Instead, virus-specific CD8+ T cells caused morphologic and molecular changes in the adipose tissue, which led to depletion of lipid stores. These changes occurred at a time point that preceded the peak of the CD8+ T cell response and required T cell-intrinsic type I interferon signaling and antigen-specific priming. Our results link systemic antiviral immune responses to adipose-tissue remodeling and reveal an underappreciated role of CD8+ T cells in IAC.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15292916 and 15292908
Volume :
20
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ff4fa6500513b041f594974d7b42617
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-019-0397-y