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  4. Macrophages acquire a TNF-dependent inflammatory memory in allergic asthma
 
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2022
Journal Article
Title

Macrophages acquire a TNF-dependent inflammatory memory in allergic asthma

Abstract
Background: Infectious agents can reprogram or “train” macrophages and their progenitors to respond more readily to subsequent insults. However, whether such an inflammatory memory exists in type 2 inflammatory conditions such as allergic asthma was not known.
Objective: We sought to decipher macrophage-trained immunity in allergic asthma. Methods: We used a combination of clinical sampling of house dust mite (HDM)-allergic patients, HDM-induced allergic airway inflammation in mice, and an in vitro training setup to analyze persistent changes in macrophage eicosanoid, cytokine, and chemokine production as well as the underlying metabolic and epigenetic mechanisms. Transcriptional and metabolic profiles of patient-derived and in vitro trained macrophages were assessed by RNA sequencing or metabolic flux analysis and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis, respectively.
Results: We found that macrophages differentiated from bone marrow or blood monocyte progenitors of HDM-allergic mice or asthma patients show inflammatory transcriptional reprogramming and excessive mediator (TNF-α, CCL17, leukotriene, PGE2, IL-6) responses upon stimulation. Macrophages from HDM-allergic mice initially exhibited a type 2 imprint, which shifted toward a classical inflammatory training over time. HDM-induced allergic airway inflammation elicited a metabolically activated macrophage phenotype, producing high amounts of 2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG). HDM-induced macrophage training in vitro was mediated by a formyl peptide receptor 2–TNF-2-HG-PGE2/PGE2 receptor 2 axis, resulting in an M2-like macrophage phenotype with high CCL17 production. TNF blockade by etanercept or genetic ablation of Tnf in myeloid cells prevented the inflammatory imprinting of bone marrow-derived macrophages from HDM-allergic mice.
Conclusion: Allergen-triggered inflammation drives a TNF-dependent innate memory, which may perpetuate and exacerbate chronic type 2 airway inflammation and thus represents a target for asthma therapy.
Author(s)
Lechner, A.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Henkel, F.D.R.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Hartung, F.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Bohnacker, S.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Alessandrini, F.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Gubernatorova, E.O.
Sirius University of Science and Technology
Drutskaya, M.S.
Sirius University of Science and Technology
Angioni, C.
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Schreiber, Yannick
Fraunhofer-Institut für Translationale Medizin und Pharmakologie ITMP  
Haimerl, P.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Ge, Y.
University of Dresden
Thomas, D.
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Kabat, A.M.
Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology and Epigenetics
Pearce, E.J.
Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics
Ohnmacht, C.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Nedospasov, S.A.
Sirius University of Science and Technology
Murray, P.J.
Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie
Chaker, A.M.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Schmidt-Weber, C.B.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Esser-von Bieren, J.
Technical University of Munich and Helmholtz Center Munich
Journal
The journal of allergy and clinical immunology : JACI  
DOI
10.1016/j.jaci.2021.11.026
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Translationale Medizin und Pharmakologie ITMP  
Keyword(s)
  • CCL17

  • chemokines

  • eicosanoids

  • lipid mediators

  • macrophages

  • trained immunity

  • type 2 inflammation

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