The microenvironment of visceral adipose tissue and liver alter natural killer cell viability and function

Type Article

Journal Article

Authors

M. J. Conroy; V. Fitzgerald; S. L. Doyle; S. Channon; Z. Useckaite; N. Gilmartin; C. O’Farrelly; N. Ravi; J. V. Reynolds; J. Lysaght

Year of publication

2016

Publication/Journal

Journal of Leukocyte Biology

Volume

100

Issue

6

Pages

1435-1442

Abstract

The role of NK cells in visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and liver inflammation in obesity is not fully understood. This study investigated the frequency, cytokine expression, chemokine receptor, and cytotoxicity receptor profile of NK cells in the blood, omentum, and liver of patients with the obesity-associated cancer, oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC). The effect of chronically inflamed tissue microenvironments on NK cell viability and function was also examined. We identified significantly lower NK cell frequencies in the liver of OAC patients compared with healthy controls and within the omentum and liver of OAC patients compared with blood, whereas IL-10-producing populations were significantly higher. Interestingly, our data suggest that reduced frequencies of NK cells in omentum and liver of OAC patients are not a result of impaired NK cell chemotaxis to these tissues. In fact, our functional data revealed that secreted factors from omentum and liver of OAC patients induce significant levels of NK cell death and lead to reduced percentages of TNF-α+and NKP46+NK cells and higher frequencies of IL-10-producing NK cells. Together, these data suggest that the omental and hepatic microenvironments of OAC patients alter the NK cell phenotype to a more antiinflammatory homeostatic role.