Biomolecules, Vol. 13, Pages 48: Relationship among Body Composition, Adipocytokines, and Irisin on Exercise Capacity and Quality of Life in COPD: A Pilot Study

1. IntroductionAdipose tissue was historically considered as a passive tissue for energy storage even though it is now widely recognized as an endocrine organ producing a wide variety of bioactive molecules, most of them with a systemic inflammatory effect, named adipocytokines [1]. The latter may act via autocrine, paracrine or endocrine signaling, by interfering also with the pulmonary function and contributing to the pathogenesis of the development of chronic lung diseases [2]. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the third leading cause of death in the world [3] and is characterized by progressive persistent airflow limitation that is not fully reversible. It belongs to the main four Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), a group of chronic inflammatory diseases responsible for premature mortality worldwide, including cardiovascular diseases, cancer, metabolic diseases, and pulmonary disease.NCDs are included in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as targets that aim to reduce premature mortality from NCDs by a third by 2030, relative to 2015 levels, and to improve mental health and quality of life (QoL) of these patients [4]. Fatigue is the subjective feeling of tiredness or exhaustion and is one of the most common and distressing symptoms experienced by patients with COPD [5]. Furthermore, symptoms of depression and/or anxiety merit specific enquiry when obtaining the medical history because they are common in COPD [6] and are associated with a poorer health status, increased risk of exacerbations, and emergency hospital admission [7]. Another feature of COPD is the presence of comorbidities contributing to systemic effects of the disease [8,9] that can be amplified by metabolic disorders and altered nutritional status. Body composition and nutritional status are well known to be key factors involved in the management of COPD patients as they are associated with a higher disease severity, mortality, and exacerbation risk incidence [10]. In this regard, it is recognized that obesity is an important factor in patients with COPD, due to the low-grade state of systemic inflammation determined by the production of the adipocytokines as leptin, adiponectin, and haptoglobin [11,12,13].Leptin is one of the most relevant pro-inflammatory adipocytokines since it increases TH1 cytokines and suppresses TH2 cytokine production. It is a pleiotropic hormone that plays a key role in immunometabolism and in inflammation, as its receptors are widely expressed in cells of the innate and adaptive immune systems [14,15,16] as well as in human bronchial, alveolar macrophages, and alveolar epithelial cells, bronchial smooth muscle cells, and bronchial submucosa [17,18,19,20]. Leptin itself is expressed by human lungs, including bronchial epithelial cells and alveolar type II pneumocytes and macrophages [21,22]. These findings suggest that the lung is a target organ for leptin signaling and deregulated signaling can be associated to lung diseases [23]. Our previous study assesses that an increased leptin expression in bronchial mucosa of COPD patients is associated with airway inflammation and airflow obstruction [19]. Another study concludes that leptin circulating levels, corrected for fat mass, is significantly elevated in COPD patients during acute exacerbation [24]. Adiponectin is another adipocytokine with a potential role in regulating the inflammatory response in COPD, since it induces the production/release of IL-8 by airway epithelium [25]. It exists as a multimeric complexes with different physiological activities in metabolism and immune systems, including high molecular weight complexes (HMW adiponectin) involved in airway pathophysiology: levels of adiponectin are found more elevated in patients with COPD than in controls and in exacerbated COPD than in stable COPD [26] and serum adiponectin concentrations are found positively related to deaths from respiratory causes [27]. Haptoglobin, the main carrier of free hemoglobin involved in the hepatic acute phase response, exerts immunomodulatory functions and represents a typical marker of inflammation by promoting the expression of specific dendritic cells maturation markers and pro-inflammatory Th1-associated cytokine expression [28,29]. Haptoglobin perfectly sits in the intersection between obesity and inflammation as it is also produced by white adipocytes. The lungs are a major site of the extrahepatic synthesis of haptoglobin, and serum haptoglobin levels are found increased in COPD patients [30]. As part of body composition, together with obesity, skeletal muscle dysfunction and impaired muscle mass and strength also play an important role for extrapulmonary comorbidity in COPD [31]. Altered body composition is an independent factor in daily life and in important outcomes, such as exercise capacity and inflammation management, in COPD patients. A recent study [32] enrolled 270 stable COPD patients with normal body composition, with obesity, with sarcopenia, and with sarcopenic-obesity. These subjects were tested for exercise capacity, for respiratory muscle strength and for dyspnea severity and for symptoms of anxiety and depression. The authors found that the subjects with sarcopenic-obesity were the most impaired for physical activity assessed by the 6 min walking test (6MWT) and together with the subjects with sarcopenia with the worst muscle strength. Interestingly, the authors found no differences regarding symptoms of anxiety and depression.In this context, the muscle-derived cytokines, named myokines, as irisin, are found dysregulated in the presence of the cigarette smoking factor, that, in turn, could impair muscle protein synthesis in COPD [33,34].Lastly, gastrointestinal dysfunction and its symptoms are prevalent extrapulmonary systemic manifestations of COPD associated with reduced QoL and also increased with increasing disease severity [35] as well as gut microbiota which represents a key factor in immune response regulation also in COPD [36]. In this context, the intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP) is a marker of intestinal integrity [37]. It is a 15-kDa, cytosolic, water-soluble protein, mainly present in the mature enterocytes of the small intestine that quickly diffuses once the integrity enterocyte membrane is lost. The impact of the adipocytokine and of dysbiosis marker dysregulated expression/levels together with the nutritional status parameters in the COPD assessment are still unclear.

To our best knowledge, no previous studies have been conducted on the role played by body composition and the aforementioned cytokines and I-FABP on the functional exercise capacity, respiratory function, and QoL of COPD patients, therefore, we conducted this pilot study to better identify their role in the pulmonary function and in mental health and quality of life of COPD patients in comparison to the matched healthy subjects.

4. DiscussionAdipose tissue has been implicated in the regulation of the immune system, also in inflammatory chronic diseases such as COPD [1,2,20,23]. Skeletal muscle is also involved in metabolism regulation by myokines’ production [33,34]. Earlier studies suggested that body composition and physical activity represent crucial factors for the respiratory function and quality of life of COPD patients [10].Furthermore, gut microbiota also represents a key factor in immune response and immune system regulation in COPD, likewise gastrointestinal dysfunction and its symptoms are prevalent extrapulmonary systemic manifestations of COPD associated with reduced quality of life of these patients [36]. However, whether all these aforementioned factors are functionally involved in the progression and management of COPD disease is a matter of debate. In this pilot study with 51 subjects enrolled, we investigated in COPD patients in comparison to matched healthy subjects, the role of leptin, adiponectin, haptoglobin, irisin, and I-FABP in the body composition assessment, in functional exercise capacity, in respiratory function, and in quality of life. It is important to highlight that, in our experimental design, we used the handheld bioelectrical-impedance analysis (BIA) for body composition evaluation, a valid and accurate tool comparable to the dual X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in COPD patients, as a recent study identified BIA with a high concordance with DXA for fat mass [51].

The following new main findings are reported:

(1) Adiposity markers such as fat mass, abdomen, and waist circumferences are significantly higher in COPD than in controls;

(2) With the exception of the high molecular weight complexes (HMW) of adiponectin, each of the adipocytokines evaluated (leptin, leptin/fat mass ratio, adiponectin, and haptoglobin) is significantly higher in COPD than in controls, whereas I-FABP is unchanged;

(3) Irisin/muscle mass ratio is significantly higher in non-smokers than in smokers, regardless of belonging to COPD or control groups;

(4) The SF-36 Physical Functioning section questionnaire for the quality of life provides a significant lower score in COPD than in controls;

(5) Leptin is strongly positively correlated with adiposity markers, 6MWT (for the functional exercise capacity of COPD patients) is strongly positively correlated with good health nutritional parameters and strongly inversely correlated with adiposity markers; likewise, FEV1 is strongly inversely correlated with haptoglobin adipocytokine;

(6) Only in the COPD group, haptoglobin/fat mass ratio, and adiponectin are significantly negatively correlated to irisin; likely, adiponectin is significantly negatively correlated to the SF-36 Physical Functioning section questionnaire.

Our study brings additional information on the potential role of the networking among the adipocytokine leptin, adiponectin, haptoglobin, the myokine irisin, and the body composition in the daily quality of life and in the respiratory capacity of COPD patients. Systemic inflammation may also initiate or worsen comorbid diseases that can lead to impaired functional capacity, worsening dyspnea, reduced health-related quality of life, and increased mortality.

Recently, Khudiakova and co-authors in a very new study [2] investigated the associations among several adipocytokines (leptin and total adiponectin included) and chronic bronchitis in 115 young patients affected by chronic bronchitis versus 115 matched healthy controls, in presence or in absence of abdominal obesity. The authors found significantly increased leptin and total adiponectin levels in patients affected by chronic bronchitis with abdominal obesity in comparison with those without abdominal obesity. Khudiakova and co-authors concluded that their results allow to better understand the pathogenesis of the development of inflammatory diseases of the bronchi against the background of abdominal obesity. In this context, despite that our study was a pilot study performed on a total of 51 subjects between COPD and healthy controls, and that it was performed on a cohort of the population with a mean age of 67.6 years, it perfectly matches with the result of the aforementioned study, regarding leptin and the total adiponectin plasmatic levels, that we found significantly increased in COPD versus healthy controls. In addition, not only circulating leptin levels are found increased in COPD in comparison to controls, confirming what is found also in other previous studies [2,24], but also the circulating level of leptin also remains significantly strongly increased in COPD patients versus healthy controls even after normalization for the fat mass parameter (leptin/fat mass ratio).This important result supports the hypothesis that the pleiotropic hormone leptin in COPD disease is a pro-inflammatory cytokine per se regardless of the amount of the adipose tissue, first organ of leptin production: this leads to the concept that leptin may be considered for clinical practice as a circulating new biomarker for early diagnosis and better management of COPD disease. This result is assessed only for leptin adipocytokine but not for the other tested adipocytokines. In addition, the novel adipocytokine haptoglobin has been recently assessed as a new inflammatory marker in COPD [30].In a recent study, Higman and co-authors [52] do not find altered levels of haptoglobin in COPD patients but report a significantly positive correlation between macrophage CD163 and haptoglobin expression, supporting the role of the CD163-haptglobin in the regulation of iron bioavailability in COPD. Our results, according to the above mentioned study, reported that the serum haptoglobin level is simultaneously and significantly increased in COPD rather than in controls. In addition, its expression significantly and negatively correlated with FEV1 both in COPD and in controls, strongly supporting also, for haptoglobin, a role of pro-inflammatory cytokine in the immune systems of COPD patients.On the other hand, skeletal muscle dysfunction in COPD is also related to systemic inflammation, advanced age of the patients and oxidative stress, playing an important role in COPD progression and severity [31]. In a recent study conducted in 463 COPD patients belonging to all the four categories of GOLD stages [53], it has been found that fat-free mass (FFM), hand grip strength test, BMI, and respiratory and skeletal muscle functions were significantly decreased in patients with more severe COPD, leading to the concept that the nutritional status should be considered firstly and continuously in the management of COPD progression. In this regard, smoking is the most important risk factor for the development of COPD, where exposure to cigarette smoke per se can also induce skeletal muscle dysfunction and muscle mass reduction, that could be most likely reversible by smoking cessation [33]. Skeletal muscle, as adipose tissue, is an endocrine organ secreting several hormones including the pro-myogenic factor irisin, which plays a key role in the glucose and lipid metabolism homeostasis.Irisin, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α)-dependent, is a myokine mainly produced in specific conditions like hunger, cold stimulation, and active exercise [54,55]. It acts in a paracrine way in several organs, including adipose tissue, where it induces the browning of adipose tissue from white adipocytes. Irisin was also evaluated in our pilot study and, despite several studies, indicated that its expression decreased with COPD severity. In this pilot study, we did not find any differences for irisin circulating levels between COPD patients and healthy controls. Nevertheless, we find a significant reduction in smokers in comparison to non-smoker subjects, regardless of belonging to COPD or control groups: this finding is in line with the evidence reporting skeletal muscle dysfunction and decrease in irisin level in the presence of cigarette smoking exposure [31,34]. To strengthen this result, we also find, only in COPD patients, a significant inverse correlation between both haptoglobin and total adiponectin with irisin, also normalized for the muscle mass, leading to the concept that in this cohort of patients, irisin may be counteracted by the pro-inflammatory adipocytokines, adiponectin and haptoglobin, that sustain the inflammatory state in COPD patients.At the same time, a previous study assessed that higher plasma adiponectin levels were independently associated with emphysema, decreased BMI, female sex, older age, and lower post-bronchodilator change in FEV1 [56]. The combined results of symptoms of COPD, including fatigue, dizziness, and dyspnea, as well as the presence of an inflammatory state, would have contributed to limitations in physical activity. In our work, we found an inverse correlation between lower Physical Functioning score and serum total adiponectin levels only in COPD patients: this could reflect the above mentioned concept also supporting a relation between disease severity and adiponectin levels.The inflammatory status in COPD and QoL may be affected by many conditions, such as disease activity and presence of comorbidities [57]. In this context, PhA is recognized as an indicator of cellular health and may be a useful marker of physical function in geriatric populations as well as in patients with chronic inflammation [41,58,59,60]. In previous investigations, PhA has been related with muscle strength in different conditions, poor prognosis in chronic diseases, and impaired quality of life [61,62]. Regardless of sex, age, and skeletal muscle, PhA predicts body strength, agility, and dynamic balance in healthy older adults and is positively associated with 6MWT and functional fitness. In a previous study in breast cancer patients [58], higher PhA values were found positively correlated with higher intracellular water (ICW) values, suggesting that PhA could play a role in maintaining cell membrane quality and integrity. To this regard, we found a significant positive correlation between 6MWT and each of the bioimpedance good health parameters, included PhA and ICW, supporting the previous cited study.In addition, accordingly with Maddocks et al. [63], we found that PhA is a strong marker of exercise functional capacity, in agreement with a recent study in which the authors found that PhA was correlated to SF-36 score and 6MWT [64]. As expected, our results showed that physical functioning domain was lower in COPD patients compared to subjects without COPD. These results suggest that health status is associated to the presence of respiratory symptoms. In fact, there is an association between breathlessness and muscle weakness independent of obstructive lung function impairment, and this relationship was stronger among physically inactive subjects. It is important to note that neither the other domain of health status nor depression and anxiety were significantly different in our group. Similar relationships between disease severity and physical, but not mental, health status assessed by SF-36 have been reported from another population-based study [65]. It may be speculated that other factors such as older age and presence of comorbidities have an impact on overall quality of life in our groups.Regarding I-FABP circulating level, our results confirm what a previous study reported [36], that there is no difference between COPD patients and controls, subject for I-FABP circulating plasmatic level. Taken together, all our evidence supports the presence of a bidirectional interconnection between adipocytokines, pulmonary function, and body composition whereby mediators produced by adipose tissue together with other inflammatory markers can be involved in the lung inflammation and contribute to the prognosis, severity, and the quality of life of COPD patients [66,67].

This experimental study has some limitations:

(1) As a pilot study, it has a small sample size: this factor did not allow us to perform a normalization for the several available variables in all the comparisons; moreover, at the same time, despite this small number of subjects, the smoking statuses of the COPD group and the control group, that is significantly different (Table 1), have an evident effect: in fact, we found a significant effect of smoking on irisin/muscle mass ratio (Figure 2E); (2) We did not test the handgrip function nor SARC-F questionnaire for sarcopenia [68,69];

(3) Lastly, we tested only the I-FABP as a marker of intestinal dysbiosis/integrity enterocyte: other specific markers such as short-chain fatty acid (SCFA), as acetate, propionate, and butyrate, recently investigated in wasting diseases for lung health, were not tested. All these aforementioned markers will be under investigation in a future study in a larger cohort of COPD patients.

5. ConclusionsAt present, evidence in literature reports that in COPD patients’ obesity is associated with risk factors for systemic chronic disease comorbidities whereas low muscle mass is associated with increased disease severity and lower quality of life [70]. Nevertheless, the prognostic utility of body composition in COPD together with the influence of both adipocytokines and myokines requires further study.

With this pilot study, we conclude that our results may represent a new insight for better managing the treatment and to limit progression of COPD, considering new circulating biomarkers as adipocytokines together with irisin myokine and exercise tools, to reduce adiposity and systemic inflammation in the view of primary prevention.

Primary prevention by a healthy lifestyle, including not only a healthy diet but also a physical activity habit related to one’s own capacity, is the first choice, also for patients with pulmonary disease. At the present time, the real contribution of adipocytokines and myokines to skeletal muscle dysfunction in COPD have not been fully understood.

Primary prevention by lifestyle factors, including eubiosis condition, helps to maintain a general wellness of the COPD patients, by strengthening the function of immune systems and by counteracting the effect of the sedentary life and the probable consequential obesity with its low-grade state of systemic inflammation.

In this scenario, our results may lead the researchers to better investigate the role of the adipocytokines produced by adipose tissue and on the myokines produced by skeletal muscles, to better identify an effective approach for the primary prevention and for a tailored therapy, including lifestyle habits, for COPD patients.

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