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Effects of lifestyle and associated diseases on serum CC16 suggest complex interactions among metabolism, heart and lungs.

Authors :
Rohmann, Nathalie
Stürmer, Paula
Geisler, Corinna
Schlicht, Kristina
Knappe, Carina
Hartmann, Katharina
Türk, Kathrin
Hollstein, Tim
Beckmann, Alexia
Seoudy, Anna K.
Becker, Ulla
Wietzke-Braun, Perdita
Settgast, Ute
Tran, Florian
Rosenstiel, Philip
Beckmann, Jan H.
von Schönfels, Witigo
Seifert, Stephan
Heyckendorf, Jan
Franke, Andre
Source :
Journal of Advanced Research. May2024, Vol. 59, p161-171. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • CC16 is an anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory protein expressed in respiratory club cells. • Severe abdominal obesity and arterial hypertension robustly decrease serum CC16. • ACEi/ARBs, uricosurics and chronic heart failure robustly increase serum CC16. • Effects might be mediated by adipose tissue inflammation as well as RAAS and uric acid disturbance. • Findings indicate a complex interplay of the metabolic, respiratory and cardiovascular system. Clara cell 16-kDa protein (CC16) is an anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory secreted pulmonary protein with reduced serum concentrations in obesity according to recent data. Studies focused solely on bodyweight, which does not properly reflect obesity-associated implications of the metabolic and reno-cardio-vascular system. The purpose of this study was therefore to examine CC16 in a broad physiological context considering cardio-metabolic comorbidities of primary pulmonary diseases. CC16 was quantified in serum samples in a subset of the FoCus (N = 497) and two weight loss intervention cohorts (N = 99) using ELISA. Correlation and general linear regression analyses were applied to assess CC16 effects of lifestyle, gut microbiota, disease occurrence and treatment strategies. Importance and intercorrelation of determinants were validated using random forest algorithms. CC16 A38G gene mutation, smoking and low microbial diversity significantly decreased CC16. Pre-menopausal female displayed lower CC16 compared to post-menopausal female and male participants. Biological age and uricosuric medications increased CC16 (all p < 0.01). Adjusted linear regression revealed CC16 lowering effects of high waist-to-hip ratio (est. −11.19 [−19.4; −2.97], p = 7.99 × 10−3), severe obesity (est. −2.58 [−4.33; −0.82], p = 4.14 × 10−3) and hypertension (est. −4.31 [−7.5; −1.12], p = 8.48 × 10−3). ACEi/ARB medication (p = 2.5 × 10−2) and chronic heart failure (est. 4.69 [1.37; 8.02], p = 5.91 × 10−3) presented increasing effects on CC16. Mild associations of CC16 were observed with blood pressure, HOMA-IR and NT-proBNP, but not manifest hyperlipidemia, type 2 diabetes, diet quality and dietary weight loss intervention. A role of metabolic and cardiovascular abnormalities in the regulation of CC16 and its modifiability by behavioral and pharmacological interventions is indicated. Alterations by ACEi/ARB and uricosurics could point towards regulatory axes comprising the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and purine metabolism. Findings altogether strengthen the importance of interactions among metabolism, heart and lungs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20901232
Volume :
59
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Advanced Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176899565
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jare.2023.06.005