单位:[1]Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,Alabama[2]Department of Geriatrics and Institute of Geriatrics, Union Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Scienceand Technology, Wuhan, China华中科技大学同济医学院附属协和医院[3]Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Center of Respiratory Medicine, China-JapanFriendship Hospital, National Clinical Research Center for Respiratory Diseases, Beijing, China[4]Department of Biological Sciences,Alabama State University, Montgomery, Alabama
Augmented glycolysis due to metabolic reprogramming in lung myofibroblasts is critical to their profibrotic phenotype. The primary glycolysis byproduct, lactate, is also secreted into the extracellular milieu, together with which myofibroblasts and macrophages form a spatially restricted site usually described as fibrotic niche. Therefore, we hypothesized that myofibroblast glycolysis might have a non-cell autonomous effect through lactate regulating the pathogenic phenotype of alveolar macrophages. Here, we demonstrated that there was a markedly increased lactate in the conditioned media of TGF-beta 1 (transforming growth factor-beta 1)-induced lung myofibroblasts and in the BAL fluids (BALFs) from mice with TGF-beta 1- or bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis. Importantly, the media and BALFs promoted profibrotic mediator expression in macrophages. Mechanistically, lactate induced histone lactylation in the promoters of the profibrotic genes in macrophages, consistent with the upregulation of this epigenetic modification in these cells in the fibrotic lungs. The lactate inductions of the histone lactylation and profibrotic gene expression were mediated by p300, as evidenced by their diminished concentrations in p300-knockdown macrophages. Collectively, our study establishes that in addition to protein, lipid, and nucleic acid molecules, a metabolite can also mediate intercellular regulations in the setting of lung fibrosis. Our findings shed new light on the mechanism underlying the key contribution of myofibroblast glycolysis to the pathogenesis of lung fibrosis.
基金:
U.S. National Institutes of HealthUnited States Department of Health & Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA [HL135830]; Department of DefenseUnited States Department of Defense [W81XWH-20-1-0226]
第一作者单位:[1]Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,Alabama
通讯作者:
通讯机构:[1]Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham,Alabama[*1]Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 901 19th Street South, BMR II 233, Birmingham, AL 35294.
推荐引用方式(GB/T 7714):
Cui Huachun,Xie Na,Banerjee Sami,et al.Lung Myofibroblasts Promote Macrophage Profibrotic Activity through Lactate-induced Histone Lactylation[J].AMERICAN JOURNAL of RESPIRATORY CELL and MOLECULAR BIOLOGY.2021,64(1):115-125.doi:10.1165/rcmb.2020-0360OC.
APA:
Cui, Huachun,Xie, Na,Banerjee, Sami,Ge, Jing,Jiang, Dingyuan...&Liu, Gang.(2021).Lung Myofibroblasts Promote Macrophage Profibrotic Activity through Lactate-induced Histone Lactylation.AMERICAN JOURNAL of RESPIRATORY CELL and MOLECULAR BIOLOGY,64,(1)
MLA:
Cui, Huachun,et al."Lung Myofibroblasts Promote Macrophage Profibrotic Activity through Lactate-induced Histone Lactylation".AMERICAN JOURNAL of RESPIRATORY CELL and MOLECULAR BIOLOGY 64..1(2021):115-125