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Mitohormesis reprogrammes macrophage metabolism to enforce tolerance

Authors :
Stella Zhu
Kevin M. Tharp
Kaoru Saijo
Breanna Ford
Rida I. Khan
Daniel K. Nomura
Johanna ten Hoeve
Shannon K. Louie
Anthony T. Iavarone
Janet M. Winchester
Greg A. Timblin
Andreas Stahl
Jerome Wang
Source :
Nature metabolism
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Macrophages generate mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and mitochondrial reactive electrophilic species as antimicrobials during Toll-like receptor (TLR)-dependent inflammatory responses. Whether mitochondrial stress caused by these molecules impacts macrophage function is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that both pharmacologically driven and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-driven mitochondrial stress in macrophages triggers a stress response called mitohormesis. LPS-driven mitohormetic stress adaptations occur as macrophages transition from an LPS-responsive to LPS-tolerant state wherein stimulus-induced pro-inflammatory gene transcription is impaired, suggesting tolerance is a product of mitohormesis. Indeed, like LPS, hydroxyoestrogen-triggered mitohormesis suppresses mitochondrial oxidative metabolism and acetyl-CoA production needed for histone acetylation and pro-inflammatory gene transcription, and is sufficient to enforce an LPS-tolerant state. Thus, mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and mitochondrial reactive electrophilic species are TLR-dependent signalling molecules that trigger mitohormesis as a negative feedback mechanism to restrain inflammation via tolerance. Moreover, bypassing TLR signalling and pharmacologically triggering mitohormesis represents a new anti-inflammatory strategy that co-opts this stress response to impair epigenetic support of pro-inflammatory gene transcription by mitochondria.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a722cb204a7ecc072b30f254d2fa4300