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Lactate Is a Natural Suppressor of RLR Signaling by Targeting MAVS
Author(s) -
Weina Zhang,
Guihua Wang,
Zhigang Xu,
Hai-Qing Tu,
Fuqing Hu,
Jiang Dai,
Yan Chang,
Yaqi Chen,
Yanjun Lu,
HaoLong Zeng,
Zhen Cai,
Fei Han,
Chuan Xu,
Guoxiang Jin,
Li Sun,
BoSyong Pan,
ShiueWei Lai,
Che-Chia Hsu,
Jia Xu,
ZhongZhu Chen,
Hongyu Li,
Pankaj Seth,
Junbo Hu,
Xuemin Zhang,
Huiyan Li,
HuiKuan Lin
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.2019.05.003
Subject(s) - biology , glycolysis , hexokinase , innate immune system , lactate dehydrogenase a , microbiology and biotechnology , transmembrane protein , lactate dehydrogenase , immune system , biochemistry , metabolism , immunology , enzyme , receptor
RLR-mediated type I IFN production plays a pivotal role in elevating host immunity for viral clearance and cancer immune surveillance. Here, we report that glycolysis, which is inactivated during RLR activation, serves as a barrier to impede type I IFN production upon RLR activation. RLR-triggered MAVS-RIG-I recognition hijacks hexokinase binding to MAVS, leading to the impairment of hexokinase mitochondria localization and activation. Lactate serves as a key metabolite responsible for glycolysis-mediated RLR signaling inhibition by directly binding to MAVS transmembrane (TM) domain and preventing MAVS aggregation. Notably, lactate restoration reverses increased IFN production caused by lactate deficiency. Using pharmacological and genetic approaches, we show that lactate reduction by lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA) inactivation heightens type I IFN production to protect mice from viral infection. Our study establishes a critical role of glycolysis-derived lactate in limiting RLR signaling and identifies MAVS as a direct sensor of lactate, which functions to connect energy metabolism and innate immunity.

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