Prantner Daniel, Vogel Stefanie N
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 685 West Baltimore St., Suite 380, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
J Leukoc Biol. 2025 Mar 14;117(3). doi: 10.1093/jleuko/qiae215.
Approximately one million cases of sepsis in the United States occur annually. The early phase of sepsis features dramatic changes in host metabolism and inflammation. While examining the effects of metabolic pathways on inflammation, we discovered that the highly reactive glycolytic metabolite, methylglyoxal (MG), accumulates intracellularly during classical activation of macrophages. Herein, we explored the role of glycolysis and the master regulator of glycolysis, Hypoxia-Inducing Factor-1α (HIF-1α), in inflammation and MG accumulation in mouse and human macrophages. To determine how HIF-1α regulates the inflammatory response of macrophages, we correlated HIF-1α stabilization with proinflammatory gene expression and MG-adduct accumulation in WT vs HIF1a-deficient macrophages treated with LPS or LPS + IFN-γ. A nearly complete loss of HIF-1α protein expression in response to the hypoxia mimetic, cobalt chloride, confirmed the phenotype of the HIF1a-deficient macrophages. Moreover, absence of HIF-1α was also associated with decreased MG accumulation. Increasing the glucose concentration in cultured macrophages was sufficient to cause accumulation of endogenous MG-adducts which correlated with increased Tnf and Il1b expression during classical activation. The use of the MG antagonist, aminoguanidine, led to a significant decrease in Tnf and Il1b expression in both mouse macrophages and the THP-1 human macrophage cell line. Although off-target effects cannot be ruled out, these results are consistent with the possibility that MG regulates cytokine expression in classically activated macrophages. Collectively, this work suggests that HIF-1α stabilization is upstream of MG accumulation and that targeting the activity of HIF-1α in macrophages may be therapeutic during sepsis by limiting endogenous MG accumulation.
美国每年约有100万例败血症病例。败血症的早期阶段,宿主代谢和炎症会发生显著变化。在研究代谢途径对炎症的影响时,我们发现高反应性糖酵解代谢产物甲基乙二醛(MG)在巨噬细胞经典激活过程中在细胞内积累。在此,我们探讨了糖酵解及其主要调节因子缺氧诱导因子-1α(HIF-1α)在小鼠和人类巨噬细胞炎症及MG积累中的作用。为了确定HIF-1α如何调节巨噬细胞的炎症反应,我们将HIF-1α的稳定性与用LPS或LPS + IFN-γ处理的野生型与HIF1a缺陷型巨噬细胞中促炎基因表达和MG加合物积累进行了关联。对缺氧模拟物氯化钴反应时,HIF-1α蛋白表达几乎完全丧失,证实了HIF1a缺陷型巨噬细胞的表型。此外,HIF-1α的缺失也与MG积累减少有关。增加培养巨噬细胞中的葡萄糖浓度足以导致内源性MG加合物积累,这与经典激活过程中Tnf和Il1b表达增加相关。使用MG拮抗剂氨基胍可导致小鼠巨噬细胞和THP-1人巨噬细胞系中Tnf和Il1b表达显著降低。尽管不能排除脱靶效应,但这些结果与MG调节经典激活巨噬细胞中细胞因子表达的可能性一致。总体而言,这项工作表明HIF-1α的稳定在MG积累上游,并且在败血症期间通过限制内源性MG积累来靶向巨噬细胞中HIF-1α的活性可能具有治疗作用。