4.8 Article

Mesaconate is synthesized from itaconate and exerts immunomodulatory effects in macrophages

Journal

NATURE METABOLISM
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages 524-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42255-022-00565-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) [HI1400/3-1, SFB-1403, 414786233, SFB1454, 432325352, EXC2151, 390873048]
  2. FNR-ATTRACT programme [A14/BM/7632103]
  3. FNR-CORE [C18/BM/12691266]
  4. FNRS-Televie programme [7.4597.19]
  5. NIH Common Fund Metabolite Standards Synthesis Core (NHLBI) [HHSN268201300022C]

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This study reveals that mesaconate is synthesized in inflammatory macrophages from itaconate. Both non-derivatized itaconate and mesaconate dampen glycolytic activity to a similar extent, but only itaconate represses tricarboxylic acid cycle activity and cellular respiration. However, both metabolites exert similar immunomodulatory effects in pro-inflammatory macrophages.
Since its discovery in inflammatory macrophages, itaconate has attracted much attention due to its antimicrobial and immunomodulatory activity(1-3). However, instead of investigating itaconate itself, most studies used derivatized forms of itaconate and thus the role of non-derivatized itaconate needs to be scrutinized. Mesaconate, a metabolite structurally very close to itaconate, has never been implicated in mammalian cells. Here we show that mesaconate is synthesized in inflammatory macrophages from itaconate. We find that both, non-derivatized itaconate and mesaconate dampen the glycolytic activity to a similar extent, whereas only itaconate is able to repress tricarboxylic acid cycle activity and cellular respiration. In contrast to itaconate, mesaconate does not inhibit succinate dehydrogenase. Despite their distinct impact on metabolism, both metabolites exert similar immunomodulatory effects in pro-inflammatory macrophages, specifically a reduction of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-12 secretion and an increase of CXCL10 production in a manner that is independent of NRF2 and ATF3. We show that a treatment with neither mesaconate nor itaconate impairs IL-1 beta secretion and inflammasome activation. In summary, our results identify mesaconate as an immunomodulatory metabolite in macrophages, which interferes to a lesser extent with cellular metabolism than itaconate.

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