4.6 Article

Hyperglycemia-induced inflamm-aging accelerates gingival senescence via NLRC4 phosphorylation

期刊

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
卷 294, 期 49, 页码 18807-18819

出版社

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.010648

关键词

diabetes; inflammasome; cellular senescence; aging; inflammation; gingiva; hyperglycemia; inflamm-aging; NLRC4; SASP

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81870779]
  2. International Scientific Cooperation and Exchanges Project of Sichuan Province [2017HH0078]
  3. International Cooperation Project of Chengdu Municipal Science and Technology Bureau [2015-GH02-00035-HZ]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Inflamm-aging was recently affiliated with the progression of diabetic complications. Local cellular senescence together with senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) are the main contributors to inflamm-aging. However, little is known about their involvement in diabetic periodontitis. Gingiva is the first line of host defense in the periodontium, and macrophages are key SASP-carrying cells. Here, we explored the molecular mechanism by which hyperglycemia drives the inflamm-aging in the gingival tissue of diabetic mice and macrophages. We demonstrated that hyperglycemia increased the infiltrated macrophage senescence in gingival tissue of diabetic mice. Simultaneously, hyperglycemia elevated the local burden of senescent cells in gingival tissue and induced the serum secretion of SASP factors in vivo. Moreover, in vitro, high glucose induced macrophage senescence and SASP factors secretion through phosphorylation of NLRC4, which further stimulated the NF-?B/Caspase-1 cascade via an IRF8-dependent pathway. Deletion of NLRC4 or IRF8 abolished hyperglycemia-induced cellular senescence and SASP in macrophages. In addition, we found that treatment with metformin inhibited NLRC4 phosphorylation and remarkably decreased cellular senescence and SASP in the context of hyperglycemia. Our data demonstrated that hyperglycemia induces the development of inflamm-aging in gingival tissue and suggested that NLRC4 is a potential target for treatment of diabetes-associated complications.

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