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Activated cholesterol metabolism is integral for innate macrophage responses by amplifying Myd88 signaling
Sumio Hayakawa, … , Ichiro Manabe, Yumiko Oishi
Sumio Hayakawa, … , Ichiro Manabe, Yumiko Oishi
Published November 22, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(22):e138539. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.138539.
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Research Article Inflammation Vascular biology

Activated cholesterol metabolism is integral for innate macrophage responses by amplifying Myd88 signaling

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Abstract

Recent studies have shown that cellular metabolism is tightly linked to the regulation of immune cells. Here, we show that activation of cholesterol metabolism, involving cholesterol uptake, synthesis, and autophagy/lipophagy, is integral to innate immune responses in macrophages. In particular, cholesterol accumulation within endosomes and lysosomes is a hallmark of the cellular cholesterol dynamics elicited by Toll-like receptor 4 activation and is required for amplification of myeloid differentiation primary response 88 (Myd88) signaling. Mechanistically, Myd88 binds cholesterol via its CLR recognition/interaction amino acid consensus domain, which promotes the protein’s self-oligomerization. Moreover, a novel supramolecular compound, polyrotaxane (PRX), inhibited Myd88‑dependent inflammatory macrophage activation by decreasing endolysosomal cholesterol via promotion of cholesterol trafficking and efflux. PRX activated liver X receptor, which led to upregulation of ATP binding cassette transporter A1, thereby promoting cholesterol efflux. PRX also inhibited atherogenesis in Ldlr–/– mice. In humans, cholesterol levels in circulating monocytes correlated positively with the severity of atherosclerosis. These findings demonstrate that dynamic changes in cholesterol metabolism are mechanistically linked to Myd88‑dependent inflammatory programs in macrophages and support the notion that cellular cholesterol metabolism is integral to innate activation of macrophages and is a potential therapeutic and diagnostic target for inflammatory diseases.

Authors

Sumio Hayakawa, Atsushi Tamura, Nikita Nikiforov, Hiroyuki Koike, Fujimi Kudo, Yinglan Cheng, Takuro Miyazaki, Marina Kubekina, Tatiana V. Kirichenko, Alexander N. Orekhov, Nobuhiko Yui, Ichiro Manabe, Yumiko Oishi

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Figure 10

Human monocyte cholesterol and inflammation.

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Human monocyte cholesterol and inflammation.
(A) Monocyte cholesterol le...
(A) Monocyte cholesterol levels correlated positively with carotid IMT in humans. (B) Human CD14+ monocytes were treated for 20 hours with PRX (2 mM βCD) or vehicle prior to the 4-hour LPS stimulation. Localization of free cholesterol (visualized with filipin) and LAMP1 was assessed using confocal microscopy. Scale bar, 3 μm. (C) Human CD14+ monocytes were treated for 20 hours with PRX prior to 4 hours with LPS. IL6 and IL1B mRNAs were quantified using qPCR. n = 3. *P < 0.05 vs. LPS-untreated cells, #P < 0.05 vs. LPS only–treated cells, Tukey-Kramer post hoc test. Data shown as mean ± SD in all panels where P values are shown.

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