Metabolic Control of Astrocyte Pathogenic Activity via cPLA2-MAVS
Author(s) -
ChunCheih Chao,
Cristina GutiérrezVázquez,
Veit Rothhammer,
Lior Mayo,
Michael A. Wheeler,
Emily Tjon,
Stéphanie Zandee,
Ma Blain,
Kalil Alves de Lima,
Maisa C. Takenaka,
Julián Ávila-Pacheco,
Patrick Hewson,
Lei Liu,
Liliana M. Sanmarco,
Davis Borucki,
Gabriel Z. Lipof,
Sunia A. Trauger,
Clary B. Clish,
Jack P. Antel,
Alexandre Prat,
Francisco J. Quintana
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.11.016
Subject(s) - biology , astrocyte , inflammation , multiple sclerosis , experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis , sphingolipid , immune system , microbiology and biotechnology , lipid signaling , immunology , central nervous system , neuroscience
Metabolism has been shown to control peripheral immunity, but little is known about its role in central nervous system (CNS) inflammation. Through a combination of proteomic, metabolomic, transcriptomic, and perturbation studies, we found that sphingolipid metabolism in astrocytes triggers the interaction of the C2 domain in cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) with the CARD domain in mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS), boosting NF-κB-driven transcriptional programs that promote CNS inflammation in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) and, potentially, multiple sclerosis. cPLA2 recruitment to MAVS also disrupts MAVS-hexokinase 2 (HK2) interactions, decreasing HK enzymatic activity and the production of lactate involved in the metabolic support of neurons. Miglustat, a drug used to treat Gaucher and Niemann-Pick disease, suppresses astrocyte pathogenic activities and ameliorates EAE. Collectively, these findings define a novel immunometabolic mechanism that drives pro-inflammatory astrocyte activities, outlines a new role for MAVS in CNS inflammation, and identifies candidate targets for therapeutic intervention.
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