4.7 Article

Tetrahydroxy Stilbene Glucoside Alleviates Ischemic Stroke by Regulating Conformation-Dependent Intracellular Distribution of PKM2 for M2 Macrophage Polarization

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 70, Issue 49, Pages 15449-15463

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c03923

Keywords

tetrahydroxy stilbene glucoside; ischemic stroke; macrophage polarization; PKM2 conformation

Funding

  1. Anhui Provincial Natural Science Foundation
  2. Major Research Project in National Natural Science Foundation of China
  3. Open Project of Guangxi Key Laboratory of Precision Medicine in Cardiocerebrovascular Diseases Control and Prevention
  4. [1908085QH342]
  5. [91742101]
  6. [GXXNXG202102]

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This study found that tetrahydroxy stilbene glucoside (TSG) can improve the phenotypes of ischemic stroke in mice by regulating the polarization of macrophages. TSG downregulates the transcriptional levels of M1 marker genes while upregulating the M2 marker genes, leading to an increased percentage of infiltrated M2 macrophages in the brain. The mechanism behind this involves the regulation of the metabolic enzyme pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2).
Tetrahydroxy stilbene glucoside (TSG) is a bioactive ingredient with powerful anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective properties. However, the detailed mechanisms concerning the neuroprotective effect of TSG are not fully understood. This study aims to address the molecular mechanism involved in the protective effects of TSG on murine ischemic stroke. We found that TSG meliorated the phenotypes of ischemic stroke in vivo, which was correlated with the increased percentage of infiltrated M2 macrophages in brain after stroke. Mechanistically, TSG regulated macrophage polarization by significantly downregulating the transcriptional levels of M1 marker genes (iNOS and IL-1 beta) but upregulating that of the M2 marker genes (arg-1 and IL-4) following lipopolysaccharide/interferon-gamma stimulation. Consistently, TSG reversed the metabolic profiling of M1 macrophage toward the M2 status at intracellular energy levels. Surprisingly, the knockdown of an established metabolic enzyme pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) that is important for M1 switch in macrophages abolished the promotive effect of TSG on the M2 polarization. Further investigation revealed that TSG markedly downregulated the intracellular ratio of dimer/monomer to the tetramer of PKM2 without affecting its total protein expression, leading to a suppressed nuclear translocation of functioning PKM2 in macrophages for M1 differentiation. Taken together, we identified a novel mechanism for macrophage M2 polarization regulation by a small-molecule chemical that controls the quality (conformation) rather than the quantity (expression) of an intracellular M1-promoting metabolic enzyme, which offers a better understanding of the mechanisms of macrophage plasticity and has serious implication in translational strategies for the treatment of macrophage-mediated neurological diseases with natural bioactive products.

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