In addition to their role in controlling water and salt homeostasis, recent work suggests that aldosterone and mineralocorticoid receptors (MR) may be involved in adipocyte biology. This is of particular relevance given the role of MR as a high-affinity receptor for both mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids. We have thus examined the effect of aldosterone and MR on white adipose cell differentiation. When cells are cultured in a steroid-free medium, aldosterone promotes acquisition of the adipose phenotype of 3T3-L1 and 3T3-F442A cells in a time-, dose-, and MR-dependent manner. In contrast, late and long-term exposure to dexamethasone inhibits adipocyte terminal maturation. The aldosterone effect on adipose maturation was accompanied by induction of PPARgamma mRNA expression, which was blocked by the MR antagonist spironolactone. Under permissive culture conditions, specific MR down-regulation by siRNAs markedly inhibited 3T3-L1 differentiation by interfering with the transcriptional control of adipogenesis, an effect not mimicked by specific inactivation of the glucocorticoid receptor. These results demonstrate that MR represents an important proadipogenic transcription factor that may mediate both aldosterone and glucocorticoid effects on adipose tissue development. MR thus may be of pathophysiological relevance to the development of obesity and the metabolic syndrome.
The human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A2-restricted zinc transporter (ZnT)8186–194 and other islet epitopes elicit interferon-γ secretion by CD8+ T cells preferentially in type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients compared with controls. Here, we show that clonal ZnT8186–194-reactive CD8+ T cells express private T-cell receptors and display equivalent functional properties in T1D and healthy subjects. Ex-vivo analyses further revealed that CD8+ T cells reactive to ZnT8186–194 and other islet epitopes circulate at similar frequencies and exhibit a predominantly naïve phenotype in age-matched T1D and healthy donors. Higher frequencies of ZnT8186–194-reactive CD8+ T cells with a more antigen-experienced phenotype were detected in children vs. adults, irrespective of disease status. Moreover, some ZnT8186–194-reactive CD8+ T-cell clonotypes were found to cross-recognize a Bacteroides stercoris mimotope. While ZnT8 was poorly expressed in thymic medullary epithelial cells, variable thymic expressions levels of islet antigens did not modulate the peripheral frequency of their cognate CD8+ T cells. In contrast, ZnT8186–194-reactive cells were enriched in the pancreata of T1D donors vs. non-diabetic and type 2 diabetic controls. Thus, islet-reactive CD8+ T cells circulate in most individuals, but home to the pancreas preferentially in T1D patients. We conclude that the activation of this common islet-reactive T-cell repertoire and progression to T1D likely require defective peripheral immunoregulation and/or a pro-inflammatory islet microenvironment.
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