Plasma soluble TIM-3 is increased in normoglycemic South Asian women compared to Nordic women after gestational diabetes mellitus and associated with markers of metaflammation
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35980Date
2024-11-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Grannes, Helene; Sharma, Archana; Suntharalingam, Anita; Michelsen, Annika Elisabet; Aukrust, Pål; Ueland, Thor; Birkeland, Kåre Inge; Gregersen, Ida; Lee-Ødegård, Sindre; Halvorsen, BenteAbstract
Methods - We measured plasma levels of T cell exhaustion marker soluble T cell immunoglobin mucin domain 3 (sTIM-3), sCD25, sCD27 and soluble lymphocyte activation gene (sLAG)-3 in 266 women of South Asian (n = 160) and white Nordic (n = 106) ethnic background with a history of GDM.
Results - Baseline plasma concentration of sTIM-3 was higher in South Asian women compared to Nordic women (p < 0.001). This difference was driven by higher sTIM-3 in South Asian women with NGT, compared to their Nordic counterparts (p = 0.005) but there were no significant differences comparing Nordic and South Asian women with altered glucose tolerance (AGT). Soluble TIM-3 correlated positively with waist-height ratio (WHtR) and body mass index across all groups, but whereas sTIM-3 correlated moderately and consistently with markers of metaflammation in South Asians, this pattern was not found in Nordic women. Mediation analysis indicated that 15 % of the difference found in adipose insulin resistance between ethnicities could be mediated by sTIM-3, and that 33 % of the difference in sTIM-3 concentrations could be mediated by WHtR. Moreover, T cell markers sCD27 and sLAG3 were also increased in South Asian women compared with Nordic women, further supporting involvement of T cell activation in these women.
Conclusion - We found increased levels of sTIM-3, as well as additional markers of T cell activation/exhaustion, in a population of normoglycemic South Asian women with previous gestational diabetes as compared to women of Nordic descent. The possible causal relationship between T cell activation and metabolic dysfunction in high-risk South Asian women is however still elusive and merits further investigation.