Low-dose Acetylsalicylic Acid Inhibits the Secretion of Interleukin-6 from White Adipose Tissue
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Background: Chronically elevated interleukin-6 (IL-6) is implicated in obesity-associated pathologies, where a proportion of this cytokine is derived from adipose tissue. Proinflammatory prostaglandins, which regulate this cytokine elsewhere, are also produced by this tissue.
Objective: To investigate whether constitutively active cyclooxygenase (COX)/prostaglandin (PG) pathway in white adipose tissue (WAT) is responsible for basal IL-6 production.
Design: The effect of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), an inhibitor of COX, on IL-6 was assessed in human subjects and mice. COX, downstream PG synthase (PGS) activity and PG receptor signalling were determined in subcutaneous (SC), gonadal (GN) WAT and adipocytes.
Methods And Results: In obese humans, low-dose ASA (150 mg day(-1) for 10 days) inhibited systemic IL-6 and reduced IL-6 release from SC WAT ex vivo (0.2 mM). Similarly, in mice, ASA (0.2 and 2.0 mg kg(-1)) suppressed SC WAT 6-keto-PGF(1alpha) (a stable metabolite of prostacyclin) and IL-6 release. Although both COX isoforms are comparably expressed, prostacyclin synthase expression is higher in GN WAT, with levels of activity correlating directly with IL-6. Both ASA (5 mM) and NS-398 (COX-2 selective inhibitor <or=1 microM), but not SC-560 (COX-1 selective inhibitor <or=1 microM), attenuated IL-6 release from murine WAT in vitro and abolished its depot differences. Prostacyclin receptor (IP) and, to a lesser extent, PGE(2) (EP2 and EP4) receptor agonists elevated the release of IL-6 from adipocytes.
Conclusions: In adipose tissue, constitutive COX-2-coupled prostacyclin triggers the release of basal IL-6, which in obese subjects is significantly dampened by ASA ingestion, thus offering a novel, modifiable pathway to regulate the potentially pathological component of this cytokine.
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