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GATA2 controls alveolar macrophage inflammatory gene expression and metabolic function
Morgan Jackson-Strong, Satarupa Ganguly, Aaron Francis, Flavia Rago, Jitendra Kanshana, Brandon A. Michalides, Lihong Teng, Omkar S. Betsur, Sonia Kruszelnicki, Karsen E. Shoger, Aaron Kim, Kay Bajpai, Amina Suleyman, Abigail Sekyere, Mika Hara, Varsha Sriram, Alok Kumar, Greg M. Delgoffe, Niranjana Natarajan, John F. Alcorn, Alison B. Kohan, Rachel A. Gottschalk
Morgan Jackson-Strong, Satarupa Ganguly, Aaron Francis, Flavia Rago, Jitendra Kanshana, Brandon A. Michalides, Lihong Teng, Omkar S. Betsur, Sonia Kruszelnicki, Karsen E. Shoger, Aaron Kim, Kay Bajpai, Amina Suleyman, Abigail Sekyere, Mika Hara, Varsha Sriram, Alok Kumar, Greg M. Delgoffe, Niranjana Natarajan, John F. Alcorn, Alison B. Kohan, Rachel A. Gottschalk
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Research Article Immunology Pulmonology

GATA2 controls alveolar macrophage inflammatory gene expression and metabolic function

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Abstract

Alveolar macrophages (AMs) catabolize lipid-rich pulmonary surfactant to support gas exchange and have antiinflammatory programming to limit tissue damage in response to minor challenges. GATA transcription factors (TFs) shape immune cell fates, and GATA2 is expressed in a lung-specific manner in macrophages. GATA2 mutations and lung macrophage downregulation of GATA2 have been associated with chronic pulmonary pathologies in humans, but the role of GATA2 in coordinating AM function is not well defined. Using mice with myeloid-specific deletion of the GATA2 DNA binding C-terminal zinc finger domain, we show that GATA2 deficiency promotes enhanced inflammatory gene expression and metabolic dysfunction in AMs in response to type 2 stimuli. Although homeostatic functions of AMs remain largely intact, GATA2 deficiency increases expression of type 2 response genes during IL-33–induced inflammation. Coincident with GATA2-dependent expression of genes in metabolic pathways, Seahorse metabolic flux analysis indicates that AM metabolism is compromised in the absence of GATA2. AM GATA2-dependent gene networks are enriched for targets of TFs previously demonstrated to interact with GATA2 in other cellular contexts, including PU.1, PPARγ, and other regulators of AM function. Our data suggest that GATA2 modulates AM metabolic and transcriptomic programming to restrain responses and maintain AM identity during inflammation.

Authors

Morgan Jackson-Strong, Satarupa Ganguly, Aaron Francis, Flavia Rago, Jitendra Kanshana, Brandon A. Michalides, Lihong Teng, Omkar S. Betsur, Sonia Kruszelnicki, Karsen E. Shoger, Aaron Kim, Kay Bajpai, Amina Suleyman, Abigail Sekyere, Mika Hara, Varsha Sriram, Alok Kumar, Greg M. Delgoffe, Niranjana Natarajan, John F. Alcorn, Alison B. Kohan, Rachel A. Gottschalk

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Figure 2

Homeostatic functions remain largely intact in GATA2-deficient alveolar macrophages.

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Homeostatic functions remain largely intact in GATA2-deficient alveolar ...
GATA2fl/fl and GATA2LysM-Cre AMs were isolated using BAL. (A and B) Neutral lipids were stained directly ex vivo using BODIPY dye. (A) Representative images of BODIPY and Hoechst nuclear stain. (B) Quantification of BODIPY spot total intensity; points represent individual mice pooled from 3 independent experiments, normalized based on the average GATA2fl/fl per experiment. (C) The percentage of 3H-labeled lipid species quantified via TLC after Folch lipid extraction; points represent individual mice and are representative of 2 independent experiments. (D–F) AMs were treated with S. aureus pHrodo bioparticles for 90 minutes and, after fixation, the spot total intensity of internalized bioparticles was quantified via immunofluorescence imaging. (D) Representative images of internalized pHrodo bioparticles and Hoechst nuclear stain. (E and F) Spot total intensity and spot total area of pHrodo-labeled bioparticles; points represent individual mice and are pooled from 5 independent experiments. Significance was determined using unpaired 2-tailed t test.

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