4.7 Article

D-2-Hydroxyglutarate is an anti-inflammatory immunometabolite that accumulates in macrophages after TLR4 activation

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2022.166427

关键词

Immunometabolism; Immunometabolite; Macrophage; Innate immunity; 2-hydroxyglutarate; 2-HG

资金

  1. Austrian Science Fund [SFB F83, I 4646]
  2. European Research Area Network on Cardiovascular Diseases [ERA-CVD 2019T108]
  3. Netherlands Heart Foundation senior fellowship [2017T048]
  4. NWO [OCENW. KLEIN.268]
  5. Cancer Center Amsterdam

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Upon activation, macrophages undergo metabolic rewiring and accumulate immunometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), which plays a regulatory role in macrophage function and can inhibit inflammatory responses. This study reveals a negative feedback mechanism involving the immunomodulatory metabolite D-2HG, which may exert distinct anti-inflammatory effects.
Macrophages undergo extensive metabolic rewiring upon activation which assist the cell in roles beyond energy production and synthesis of anabolic building blocks. So-called immunometabolites that accumulate upon immune activation can serve as co-factors for enzymes and can act as signaling molecules to modulate cellular processes. As such, the Krebs-cycle-associated metabolites succinate, itaconate and alpha-ketoglutarate (alpha KG) have emerged as key regulators of macrophage function. Here, we describe that 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), which is structurally similar to alpha KG and exists as two enantiomers, accumulates during later stages of LPS-induced inflammatory responses in mouse and human macrophages. D-2HG was the most abundant enantiomer in macrophages and its LPS-induced accumulation followed the induction of Hydroxyacid-Oxoacid Transhydrogenase (HOT). HOT interconverts alpha KG and gammahydroxybutyrate into D-2HG and succinic semialdehyde, and we here identified this enzyme as being immune-responsive and regulated during the course of macrophage activation. The buildup of D-2HG may be further explained by reduced expression of D-2HG Dehydrogenase (D2HGDH), which converts D-2HG back into alpha KG, and showed inverse kinetics with HOT and D-2HG levels. We tested the immunomodulatory effects of D-2HG during LPS-induced inflammatory responses by transcriptomic analyses and functional profiling of D-2HG-pre-treated macrophages in vitro and mice in vivo. Together, these data suggest a role for D-2HG in the negative feedback regulation of inflammatory signaling during late-stage LPS-responses in vitro and as a regulator of local and systemic inflammatory responses in vivo. Finally, we show that D-2HG likely exerts distinct anti-inflammatory effects, which are in part independent of alpha KG-dependent dioxygenase inhibition. Together, this study reveals an immunometabolic circuit resulting in the accumulation of the immunomodulatory metabolite D-2HG that can inhibit inflammatory macrophage responses.

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