4.7 Article

M2 Macrophage Polarization Mediates Anti-inflammatory Effects of Endothelial Nitric Oxide Signaling

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DIABETES
卷 64, 期 8, 页码 2836-2846

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AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db14-1668

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) by National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) grants [DK-068384, DK-083042, DK-090320, DK-101997, DK-073878]
  2. University of Washington Nutrition Obesity Research Center grant [DK-035816]
  3. University of Washington Diabetes Research Center Cell Function Analysis Core grant [DK-17047]
  4. NIH Cardiovascular Postdoctoral Training grants [T32-HL-07828, HL-52459, DK-083310]
  5. NIDDK Diabetic Complications Consortium Pilot and Feasibility grant [DK-076169]
  6. John L. Locke Jr. Charitable Trust
  7. Kenneth H. Cooper, M.D. Endowed Professorship in Preventive Cardiology

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Endothelial nitric oxide (NO) signaling plays a physiological role in limiting obesity-associated insulin resistance and inflammation. This study was undertaken to investigate whether this NO effect involves polarization of macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype. Mice with transgenic endothelial NO synthase overexpression were protected against high-fat diet (HFD)-induced hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance, and this effect was associated with reduced proinflammatory M1 and increased anti-inflammatory M2 activation of Kupffer cells. In cell culture studies, exposure of macrophages to endothelial NO similarly reduced inflammatory (M1) and increased anti-inflammatory (M2) gene expression. Similar effects were induced by macrophage overexpression of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), a key downstream mediator of intracellular NO signaling. Conversely, VASP deficiency induced proinflammatory M1 macrophage activation, and the transplantation of bone marrow from VASP-deficient donor mice into normal recipients caused hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance resembling that induced in normal mice by consumption of an HFD. These data suggest that proinflammatory macrophage M1 activation and macrophage-mediated inflammation are tonically inhibited by NO. VASP signal transduction, and that reduced NO. VASP signaling is involved in the effect of HFD feeding to induce M1 activation of Kupffer cells and associated hepatic inflammation. Our data implicate endothelial NO. VASP signaling as a physiological determinant of macrophage polarization and show that signaling via this pathway is required to prevent hepatic inflammation and insulin resistance.

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