| Literature DB >> 35120589 |
Anne Loft1, Søren Fisker Schmidt2, Giorgio Caratti3, Ulrich Stifel3, Jesper Havelund4, Revathi Sekar5, Yun Kwon5, Alba Sulaj6, Kan Kau Chow5, Ana Jimena Alfaro5, Thomas Schwarzmayr7, Nikolaj Rittig8, Mads Svart8, Foivos-Filippos Tsokanos5, Adriano Maida5, Andreas Blutke9, Annette Feuchtinger9, Niels Møller10, Matthias Blüher11, Peter Nawroth12, Julia Szendrödi12, Nils J Færgeman4, Anja Zeigerer5, Jan Tuckermann13, Stephan Herzig14.
Abstract
Fasting metabolism and immunity are tightly linked; however, it is largely unknown how immune cells contribute to metabolic homeostasis during fasting in healthy subjects. Here, we combined cell-type-resolved genomics and computational approaches to map crosstalk between hepatocytes and liver macrophages during fasting. We identified the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) as a key driver of fasting-induced reprogramming of the macrophage secretome including fasting-suppressed cytokines and showed that lack of macrophage GR impaired induction of ketogenesis during fasting as well as endotoxemia. Mechanistically, macrophage GR suppressed the expression of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and promoted nuclear translocation of hepatocyte GR to activate a fat oxidation/ketogenesis-related gene program, cooperatively induced by GR and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) in hepatocytes. Together, our results demonstrate how resident liver macrophages directly influence ketogenesis in hepatocytes, thereby also outlining a strategy by which the immune system can set the metabolic tone during inflammatory disease and infection.Entities:
Keywords: fasting; genomics; glucocorticoid receptor; hepatocyte; ketogenesis; liver; macrophage; nuclear receptor; transcripional regulation; tumor necrosis factor
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35120589 DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2022.01.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Metab ISSN: 1550-4131 Impact factor: 27.287