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1.
FASEB J ; 37(11): e23231, 2023 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37779347

ABSTRACT

Some metabolic diseases, such as diabetes and hyperlipidemia, are associated with a state of inflammation, which adversely affects cardiovascular health. Emerging evidence suggests that long-term hyperactivation of innate immune cells and their bone marrow progenitors, termed trained immunity, functions to accelerate atherosclerosis and its complications in cardiometabolic diseases. This review will focus on how trained immunity is established, particularly through metabolic and epigenetic reprogramming, to cause persistent and deleterious changes in immune cell function, even after the original stimulus has been corrected or removed. Understanding the mechanisms driving maladaptive trained immunity and its fundamental contribution to cardiovascular disease might enable the development of novel disease-modifying therapeutics for the reduction in cardiovascular risk in diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and related cardiometabolic states.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Diabetes Mellitus , Hyperlipidemias , Humans , Immunity, Innate , Trained Immunity , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology
2.
Atherosclerosis ; 305: 10-18, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32592946

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Lipid-rich foam cell macrophages drive atherosclerosis via several mechanisms, including inflammation, lipid uptake, lipid deposition and plaque vulnerability. The atheroma environment shapes macrophage function and phenotype; anti-inflammatory macrophages improve plaque stability while pro-inflammatory macrophages promote rupture. Current evidence suggests a variety of macrophage phenotypes occur in atherosclerotic plaques with local lipids, cytokines, oxidised phospholipids and pathogenic stimuli altering their phenotype. In this study, we addressed differential functioning of macrophage phenotypes via a systematic analysis of in vitro polarised, human monocyte-derived macrophage phenotypes, focussing on molecular events that regulate foam-cell formation. METHODS: We examined transcriptomes, protein levels and functionally determined lipid handling and foam cell formation capacity in macrophages polarised with IFNγ+LPS, IL-4, IL-10, oxPAPC and CXCL4. RESULTS: RNA sequencing of differentially polarised macrophages revealed distinct gene expression changes, with enrichment in atherosclerosis and lipid-associated pathways. Analysis of lipid processing activity showed IL-4 and IL-10 macrophages have higher lipid uptake and foam cell formation activities, while inflammatory and oxPAPC macrophages displayed lower foam cell formation. Inflammatory macrophages showed low lipid uptake, while higher lipid uptake in oxPAPC macrophages was matched by increased lipid efflux capacity. CONCLUSIONS: Atherosclerosis-associated macrophage polarisation dramatically affects lipid handling capacity underpinned by major transcriptomic changes and altered protein levels in lipid-handling gene expression. This leads to phenotype-specific differences in LDL uptake, cellular cholesterol levels and cholesterol efflux, informing how the plaque environment influences atherosclerosis progression by influencing macrophage phenotypes.


Subject(s)
Atherosclerosis , Cell Polarity , Lipid Metabolism , Macrophages/cytology , Plaque, Atherosclerotic , Atherosclerosis/genetics , Foam Cells/cytology , Humans , Lipoproteins, LDL , Macrophage Activation
3.
Sci Adv ; 5(10): eaax9183, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31692955

ABSTRACT

Macrophages drive atherosclerotic plaque progression and rupture; hence, attenuating their atherosclerosis-inducing properties holds promise for reducing coronary heart disease (CHD). Recent studies in mouse models have demonstrated that Tribbles 1 (Trib1) regulates macrophage phenotype and shows that Trib1 deficiency increases plasma cholesterol and triglyceride levels, suggesting that reduced TRIB1 expression mediates the strong genetic association between the TRIB1 locus and increased CHD risk in man. However, we report here that myeloid-specific Trib1 (mTrib1) deficiency reduces early atheroma formation and that mTrib1 transgene expression increases atherogenesis. Mechanistically, mTrib1 increased macrophage lipid accumulation and the expression of a critical receptor (OLR1), promoting oxidized low-density lipoprotein uptake and the formation of lipid-laden foam cells. As TRIB1 and OLR1 RNA levels were also strongly correlated in human macrophages, we suggest that a conserved, TRIB1-mediated mechanism drives foam cell formation in atherosclerotic plaque and that inhibiting mTRIB1 could be used therapeutically to reduce CHD.


Subject(s)
Atherosclerosis/metabolism , Atherosclerosis/pathology , Foam Cells/metabolism , Foam Cells/pathology , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Myeloid Cells/metabolism , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Animals , Cholesterol/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Middle Aged , Models, Biological , Plaque, Atherosclerotic/metabolism , Plaque, Atherosclerotic/pathology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Scavenger Receptors, Class E/metabolism
4.
Sci Rep ; 6: 39035, 2016 12 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27976724

ABSTRACT

Monocytes play a central role in regulating inflammation in response to infection or injury, and during auto-inflammatory diseases. Human blood contains classical, intermediate and non-classical monocyte subsets that each express characteristic patterns of cell surface CD16 and CD14; each subset also has specific functional properties, but the mechanisms underlying many of their distinctive features are undefined. Of particular interest is how monocyte subsets regulate secretion of the apical pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1ß, which is central to the initiation of immune responses but is also implicated in the pathology of various auto-immune/auto-inflammatory conditions. Here we show that primary human non-classical monocytes, exposed to LPS or LPS + BzATP (3'-O-(4-benzoyl)benzyl-ATP, a P2X7R agonist), produce approx. 80% less IL-1ß than intermediate or classical monocytes. Despite their low CD14 expression, LPS-sensing, caspase-1 activation and P2X7R activity were comparable in non-classical monocytes to other subsets: their diminished ability to produce IL-1ß instead arose from 50% increased IL-1ß mRNA decay rates, mediated by Hsp27. These findings identify the Hsp27 pathway as a novel therapeutic target for the management of conditions featuring dysregulated IL-1ß production, and represent an advancement in understanding of both physiological inflammatory responses and the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases involving monocyte-derived IL-1ß.


Subject(s)
HSP27 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Interleukin-1beta/metabolism , Monocytes/drug effects , Adenosine Triphosphate/analogs & derivatives , Adenosine Triphosphate/pharmacology , Cells, Cultured , Cytokines/genetics , Cytokines/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation/drug effects , HSP27 Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Humans , Inflammation/genetics , Inflammation/metabolism , Interleukin-1beta/genetics , Lipopolysaccharides/pharmacology , Monocytes/metabolism , RNA Interference , RNA Stability/drug effects , RNA Stability/genetics
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