Diabetic Cardiovascular Disease Center, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.
Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.
J Immunol. 2018 Oct 1;201(7):2054-2069. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1800224. Epub 2018 Aug 24.
Obesity and diabetes modulate macrophage activation, often leading to prolonged inflammation and dysfunctional tissue repair. Increasing evidence suggests that the NLRP3 inflammasome plays an important role in obesity-associated inflammation. We have previously shown that activation of the lipotoxic inflammasome by excess fatty acids in macrophages occurs via a lysosome-dependent pathway. However, the mechanisms that link cellular lipid metabolism to altered inflammation remain poorly understood. PPARγ is a nuclear receptor transcription factor expressed by macrophages that is known to alter lipid handling, mitochondrial function, and inflammatory cytokine expression. To undercover novel links between metabolic signaling and lipotoxic inflammasome activation, we investigated mouse primary macrophages deficient in PPARγ. Contrary to our expectation, PPARγ knockout (KO) macrophages released significantly less IL-1β and IL-1α in response to lipotoxic stimulation. The suppression occurred at the transcriptional level and was apparent for multiple activators of the NLRP3 inflammasome. RNA sequencing revealed upregulation of IFN-β in activated PPARγKO macrophages, and this was confirmed at the protein level. A blocking Ab against the type 1 IFNR restored the release of IL-1β to wild type levels in PPARγKO cells, confirming the mechanistic link between these events. Conversely, PPARγ activation with rosiglitazone selectively suppressed IFN-β expression in activated macrophages. Loss of PPARγ also resulted in diminished expression of genes involved in sterol biosynthesis, a pathway known to influence IFN production. Together, these findings demonstrate a cross-talk pathway that influences the interplay between metabolism and inflammation in macrophages.
肥胖和糖尿病会调节巨噬细胞的激活,通常导致长期炎症和功能失调的组织修复。越来越多的证据表明,NLRP3 炎性小体在肥胖相关炎症中发挥重要作用。我们之前已经表明,巨噬细胞中过量脂肪酸引发的脂毒性炎性小体的激活是通过溶酶体依赖性途径发生的。然而,将细胞脂质代谢与改变的炎症联系起来的机制仍知之甚少。PPARγ 是一种在巨噬细胞中表达的核受体转录因子,已知它可以改变脂质处理、线粒体功能和炎症细胞因子的表达。为了发现代谢信号与脂毒性炎性小体激活之间的新联系,我们研究了缺乏 PPARγ 的小鼠原代巨噬细胞。与我们的预期相反,PPARγ 敲除 (KO) 巨噬细胞在受到脂毒性刺激时释放的 IL-1β 和 IL-1α 明显减少。这种抑制发生在转录水平上,对多种 NLRP3 炎性小体的激活剂都是如此。RNA 测序显示,激活的 PPARγKO 巨噬细胞中 IFN-β 上调,这在蛋白质水平上得到了证实。针对 IFNR 类型 1 的阻断 Ab 在 PPARγKO 细胞中恢复了 IL-1β 的释放至野生型水平,证实了这些事件之间的机制联系。相反,用罗格列酮激活 PPARγ 选择性地抑制了激活的巨噬细胞中 IFN-β 的表达。PPARγ 的缺失也导致固醇生物合成途径中涉及的基因表达减少,该途径已知会影响 IFN 的产生。总之,这些发现表明存在一种交叉对话途径,影响巨噬细胞中代谢和炎症之间的相互作用。