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Myelomonocytic cells in giant cell arteritis activate trained immunity programs sustaining inflammation and cytokine production

Authors :
Eleonora Cantoni
Ivan Merelli
Davide Stefanoni
Alessandro Tomelleri
Corrado Campochiaro
Vito Giordano
Maddalena Panigada
Elena M Baldissera
Laura Merlo Pich
Valentina Natoli
Athanasios Ziogas
Jorge Domínguez-Andrés
Giacomo De Luca
Davide Mazza
Samuel Zambrano
Daniela Gnani
Marina Ferrarini
Elisabetta Ferrero
Alessandra Agresti
Barbara Vergani
Biagio Eugenio Leone
Simone Cenci
Angelo Ravelli
Marco Matucci-Cerinic
Angelo D’Alessandro
Leo A B Joosten
Lorenzo Dagna
Mihai G Netea
Raffaella Molteni
Giulio Cavalli
Cantoni, E
Merelli, I
Stefanoni, D
Tomelleri, A
Campochiaro, C
Giordano, V
Panigada, M
Baldissera, E
Merlo Pich, L
Natoli, V
Ziogas, A
Domínguez-Andrés, J
De Luca, G
Mazza, D
Zambrano, S
Gnani, D
Ferrarini, M
Ferrero, E
Agresti, A
Vergani, B
Leone, B
Cenci, S
Ravelli, A
Matucci-Cerinic, M
D'Alessandro, A
Joosten, L
Dagna, L
Netea, M
Molteni, R
Cavalli, G
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
OUP Oxford University Press, 2023.

Abstract

ObjectiveTrained immunity (TI) is a de facto memory program of innate immune cells, characterized by immunometabolic and epigenetic changes sustaining enhanced production of cytokines. TI evolved as a protective mechanism against infections; however, inappropriate activation can cause detrimental inflammation and might be implicated in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases. In this study, we investigated the role of TI in the pathogenesis of giant cell arteritis (GCA), a large-vessel vasculitis characterized by aberrant macrophage activation and excess cytokine production.MethodsMonocytes from GCA patients and from age- and sex-matched healthy donors were subjected to polyfunctional studies, including cytokine production assays at baseline and following stimulation, intracellular metabolomics, chromatin immunoprecipitation-qPCR, and combined ATAC/RNA sequencing. Immunometabolic activation (i.e. glycolysis) was assessed in inflamed vessels of GCA patients with FDG-PET and immunohistochemistry (IHC), and the role of this pathway in sustaining cytokine production was confirmed with selective pharmacologic inhibition in GCA monocytes.ResultsGCA monocytes exhibited hallmark molecular features of TI. Specifically, these included enhanced IL-6 production upon stimulation, typical immunometabolic changes (e.g. increased glycolysis and glutaminolysis) and epigenetic changes promoting enhanced transcription of genes governing pro-inflammatory activation. Immunometabolic changes of TI (i.e. glycolysis) were a feature of myelomonocytic cells in GCA lesions and were required for enhanced cytokine production.ConclusionsMyelomonocytic cells in GCA activate TI programs sustaining enhanced inflammatory activation with excess cytokine production.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....37bdc8227faaa4575ccb190f0e78e279