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An immunometabolic pathomechanism for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Sara BruzzanitiMarialuisa BocchinoMarianna SantopaoloGaetano CalìAnna Agnese StanziolaMaria D'AmatoAntonella EspositoEnrica BarraFederica GarzianoTeresa MicilloCandida ZuchegnaAntonella RomanoSalvatore De SimoneBruno ZuccarelliMaria MottolaVeronica De RosaAntonio PorcelliniFrancesco PernaGiuseppe MatareseMario Galgani
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is an inflammatory condition associated with abnormal immune responses, leading to airflow obstruction. Lungs of COPD subjects show accumulation of proinflammatory T helper (Th) 1 and Th17 cells resembling that of autoreactive immune responses. As regulatory T (Treg) cells play a central role in the control of autoimmune responses and their generation and function are controlled by the adipocytokine leptin, we herein investigated the association among systemic leptin overproduction, reduced engagement of glycolysis in T cells, and reduced peripheral frequency of Treg cells in different COPD stages. These phenomena were also associated with an impaired capacity to generate inducible Treg (iTreg) cells from conventional T (Tconv) cells. At the molecular level, we found that leptin inhibited the expression of forkhead-boxP3 (FoxP3) and its splicing variants containing the exon 2 (FoxP3-E2) that correlated inversely with inflammation and weakened lung function during COPD progression. Our data reveal that the immunometabolic pathomechanism leading to COPD progression is characterized by leptin overproduction, a decline in the expression of FoxP3 splicing forms, and an impairment in Treg cell generation and function. These results have potential implications for better understanding the autoimmune-like nature of COPD and the pathogenic events leading to lung damage.
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