Epigenetic Regulation of TLR4 in Diabetic Macrophages Modulates Immunometabolism and Wound Repair
Author(s) -
Frank M. Davis,
Aaron D. denDekker,
Andrew Kimball,
Amrita Joshi,
Mahmoud El Azzouny,
Sonya Wolf,
T. Andrea,
Jay H. Lipinski,
Jóhann E. Guðjónsson,
Xianying Xing,
Olesya Plazyo,
Christopher O. Audu,
William J. Melvin,
Kanakadurga Singer,
Peter K. Henke,
Bethany B. Moore,
Charles Burant,
Steven L. Kunkel,
Katherine Gallagher
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1901263
Subject(s) - tlr4 , epigenetics , inflammation , biology , wound healing , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology , medicine , immunology , genetics , gene
Macrophages are critical for the initiation and resolution of the inflammatory phase of wound healing. In diabetes, macrophages display a prolonged inflammatory phenotype preventing tissue repair. TLRs, particularly TLR4, have been shown to regulate myeloid-mediated inflammation in wounds. We examined macrophages isolated from wounds of patients afflicted with diabetes and healthy controls as well as a murine diabetic model demonstrating dynamic expression of TLR4 results in altered metabolic pathways in diabetic macrophages. Further, using a myeloid-specific mixed-lineage leukemia 1 (MLL1) knockout ( Mll1 f/f Lyz2 Cre+ ), we determined that MLL1 drives Tlr4 expression in diabetic macrophages by regulating levels of histone H3 lysine 4 trimethylation on the Tlr4 promoter. Mechanistically, MLL1-mediated epigenetic alterations influence diabetic macrophage responsiveness to TLR4 stimulation and inhibit tissue repair. Pharmacological inhibition of the TLR4 pathway using a small molecule inhibitor (TAK-242) as well as genetic depletion of either Tlr4 ( Tlr4 -/- ) or myeloid-specific Tlr4 (Tlr4 f/f Lyz2 Cre+ ) resulted in improved diabetic wound healing. These results define an important role for MLL1-mediated epigenetic regulation of TLR4 in pathologic diabetic wound repair and suggest a target for therapeutic manipulation.
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