Litcius/Paper detail

Thymic stromal lymphopoietin induces adipose loss through sebum hypersecretion

Ruth Choa, Junichiro Tohyama, Shogo Wada, Hu Meng, Jian Hu, Mariko Okumura, Rebecca M. May, Tanner F. Robertson, Ruth-Anne Langan Pai, Arben Nace, Christian Hopkins, Elizabeth A. Jacobsen, Malay Haldar, Garret A. FitzGerald, Edward M. Behrens, Andy J. Minn, Patrick Seale, George Cotsarelis, Brian Kim, John T. Seykora, Mingyao Li, Zoltàn Arany, Taku Kambayashi

2021Science82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sweat out the fat with TSLP! Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) is a cytokine that can promote immune responses that characterize allergic diseases. Choa et al . found that mice engineered to produce elevated TSLP displayed selective white adipose tissue loss that protected them from obesity, insulin resistance, and steatohepatitis (see the Perspective by Schneider). Protection was not mediated by eosinophils, regulatory T cells, or innate lymphoid cells. Rather, TLSP induced the migration of conventional T cells to sebaceous glands in the skin. Once there, these T cells promoted white adipose tissue loss by the hypersecretion of sebum, a lipid-rich substance that augments the skin’s barrier function. This mechanism, which likely evolved to enhance cutaneous antimicrobial defenses, could be possibly targeted in future treatments for obesity. —STS

Topics & Concepts

Thymic stromal lymphopoietinAdipose tissueImmune systemStromal cellWhite adipose tissueInnate lymphoid cellCytokineImmunologyEndocrinologyBiologyInternal medicineCancer researchInnate immune systemMedicineDermatology and Skin DiseasesExercise and Physiological ResponsesPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis