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      The immune system as a sensor of the metabolic state.

      Immunity
      Adipose Tissue, immunology, Animals, Cell Communication, Energy Metabolism, Humans, Immune System, metabolism, Liver, Lymphocytes, Macrophages, Mast Cells, Models, Biological, Signal Transduction

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          Abstract

          Mammals possess a remarkable ability to maintain and defend a constant internal milieu against diverse environmental threats. Unsurprisingly, the two systems tasked with these duties, metabolism and immunity, have evolved to share a common modular architecture that allows extensive bidirectional communication and coordination. Indeed, recent observations have highlighted numerous functionally critical immune regulatory modules located within diverse metabolic circuits. In this review, we discuss the architectural commonality between immunity and metabolism and highlight how these two primordially disparate systems leverage shared regulatory axes to coordinate metabolic physiology under conditions of normality and chronic overnutrition. Such an integrated perspective both advances our understanding of basic physiology and highlights potential opportunities for therapeutic intervention in metabolic dysfunction. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          23601683
          3663597
          10.1016/j.immuni.2013.04.001

          Chemistry
          Adipose Tissue,immunology,Animals,Cell Communication,Energy Metabolism,Humans,Immune System,metabolism,Liver,Lymphocytes,Macrophages,Mast Cells,Models, Biological,Signal Transduction

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