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Acute Iron Deprivation Reprograms Human Macrophage Metabolism and Reduces Inflammation In Vivo
Author(s) -
Marie Pereira,
TaiDi Chen,
Norzawani B Buang,
Antoni Olona,
JeongHun Ko,
Maria Prendecki,
Ana S.H. Costa,
Efterpi Nikitopoulou,
Laura Tronci,
Charles D. Pusey,
H. Terence Cook,
Stephen P. McAdoo,
Christian Frezza,
Jacques Behmoaras
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.06.039
Subject(s) - inflammation , macrophage polarization , macrophage , glycolysis , immune system , transcriptome , in vivo , microbiology and biotechnology , lipid metabolism , biology , innate immune system , oxidative phosphorylation , metabolism , chemistry , endocrinology , biochemistry , in vitro , immunology , gene expression , gene
Iron is an essential metal that fine-tunes the innate immune response by regulating macrophage function, but an integrative view of transcriptional and metabolic responses to iron perturbation in macrophages is lacking. Here, we induced acute iron chelation in primary human macrophages and measured their transcriptional and metabolic responses. Acute iron deprivation causes an anti-proliferative Warburg transcriptome, characterized by an ATF4-dependent signature. Iron-deprived human macrophages show an inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation and a concomitant increase in glycolysis, a large increase in glucose-derived citrate pools associated with lipid droplet accumulation, and modest levels of itaconate production. LPS polarization increases the itaconate:succinate ratio and decreases pro-inflammatory cytokine production. In rats, acute iron deprivation reduces the severity of macrophage-dependent crescentic glomerulonephritis by limiting glomerular cell proliferation and inducing lipid accumulation in the renal cortex. These results suggest that acute iron deprivation has in vivo protective effects mediated by an anti-inflammatory immunometabolic switch in macrophages.

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