News and Research
Immune System
Sudden Removal Of Fat Impairs Immune Function In Rodents,
Biologists Find
3-31-2003
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. A liposuction-like procedure called lipectomy
results in a loss of humoral immune protection in two commonly
studied rodent models, the prairie vole and the Siberian
hamster, scientists have found.
The
report on immune function by a team of researchers at Indiana
University, Ohio State University and Johns Hopkins University
was made available online this week by The Royal Society.
Their immune function study is the first to show that even
a moderate loss of fat leads to decreased amounts of infection-fighting
IgG antibodies.
"We
were able to show that even a subtle decrease in fat can
decrease humoral immunity, which has the potential to increase
disease susceptibility," said Indiana University biologist
Gregory Demas, who led the study. "We knew that immune
function is energetically costly, but it is now clear that
animals use energy stored as fat to bolster immunity and
likely to combat infection."
The
researchers also found that immune system function improved
after the regrowth of fat tissue that had been removed.
The
research team divided 54 adult male prairie voles and 36
adult male Siberian hamsters into three experimental groups.
The individuals from one of these groups had epididymal
white adipose tissue removed, the second group had inguinal
white adipose tissue removed, and the third group had a
surgical procedure but had no adipose tissue removed.
|
|
Half of the rodents in each of the three groups were
then exposed to an immune system-roiling antigen called keyhole limpet
hemocyanin (KLH) four weeks after surgery. The other half of each
group received KLH 12 weeks after surgery. KLH is known to induce
a strong immune response in voles and hamsters without making the
animals sick.
After a few days, the researchers measured each rodent's
bloodstream concentrations of IgG antibodies raised in response to
the presence of KLH. Lower concentrations of the antibodies signify
impaired immune function. The researchers found that immune function
in KLH-inoculated voles appeared normal four weeks after surgery but
was impaired 12 weeks after surgery. KLH-inoculated hamsters, however,
showed impaired immune function four weeks after surgery but seemed
to have recovered normal immune function 12 weeks after surgery, when
they had regained normal levels of body fat. Demas attributed the
different responses to the two species' unique physiologies.
Demas
said the study strengthens biologists' perception that the immune
function requires a lot of energy to perform "optimally"
in any mammal.
"It's not yet known whether there is also a strong
connection in humans between energy stored as fat and immune function,
but it's clearly important to see whether it holds true in humans
as well," he said.
All animals
used in the study were treated in accordance with the standards of
the Johns Hopkins University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Deborah Drazen of Johns Hopkins University and Randy Nelson of Ohio
State University also contributed to the report on immune function,
which will appear in the May 7 issue of Proceedings B of the Royal
Society. Sue Carter of the University of Illinois at Chicago provided
the prairie vole line, and Katherine Wynne-Edwards of Queens University
(Canada) provided the Siberian hamster line. The study on immune function
was funded by a National Research Service Award grant from the National
Institutes of Health.
This
article on immune function has been adapted from a news release issued
by Indiana University, www.newsinfo.iu.edu.
Next - Back
to Strengthen Immune System Research