Product Citations: 16

Disrupted α-ketoglutarate homeostasis trains monocyte-derived macrophages towards M2-like phenotype in long-term treated HIV-infection

Preprint on BioRxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology on 19 January 2025 by Escós, A., Ambikan, A. T., et al.

Cells of the myeloid lineage, particularly monocytes and macrophages, play a key role in HIV infection by contributing to viral replication, immune response, and maintaining immune balance during suppressive therapy. We hypothesized that metabolic reprogramming and altered chemokine signaling in people living with HIV (PWH) on long-term antiretroviral therapy (ART) affect monocyte transport and polarization due to ongoing inflammation. Therefore, the present study aimed to identify the mechanism of impaired monocyte/macrophage function in PWH on well-treated ART that can lead to clinical intervention strategies to improve health. Single-cell RNA sequencing, immune-phenotyping, and metabolic modeling identified altered expression of chemokine and metabolite receptors and altered metabolic flux in PWH monocytes that decreased monocyte migration. The plasma secretome revealed a nonclassical inflammatory microenvironment in PWH. Integrative multi-omics and single-cell proteomics of differentiated monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) detected metabolic reprogramming orchestrated by α-ketoglutarate (AKG) that affected macrophage function and HIV infection. Increased levels of AKG in plasma were shown to occur in PWH under ART. Therefore, when differentiating MDM with serum from PWH or AKG, macrophage function was found polarized towards an M2-like state. AKG alone was shown to increase CCR5 levels and increase HIV-1 infection in MDM. Here, we utilize systems biology-driven identification and ex vivo assays to show impaired macrophage polarization, due to metabolic training, can leads to a low-grade nonclassical inflammatory environment in well-treated PWH.

  • FC/FACS
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Regulators of health and lifespan extension in genetically diverse mice on dietary restriction

Preprint on Research Square on 8 January 2024 by Churchill, G., Francesco, A. D., et al.

Caloric restriction (CR) delays aging and extends healthy lifespan in multiple species. Alternative forms of dietary restriction (DR) such as intermittent fasting (IF) have drawn significant interest as a more sustainable regimen, but the landscape of longevity-promoting dietary interventions remains largely unexplored. Identifying the most robust, efficacious, and experimentally tractable modes of DR is key to better understanding and implementing effective longevity interventions for human healthspan. To that end, we have performed an extensive assessment of DR interventions, investigating the effects of graded levels of CR (20% and 40%) and IF (1 day and 2 days of fasting per week) on the health and survival of 960 genetically diverse female mice. All interventions extended lifespan, although only CR significantly reduced the mortality doubling time. Notably, IF did not extend lifespan in mice with high pre-intervention bodyweight. We carried out extensive phenotyping to determine the health effects of long-term DR and to better understand the mechanisms driving within-diet heterogeneity in lifespan. The top within-diet predictor of lifespan was the ability of mice to maintain bodyweight through periods of handling, an indicator of stress resilience. Additional predictors of long lifespan include specific changes in immune cells, red blood cell distribution width (RDW), and retention of adiposity in late life. We found that lifespan is heritable (h 2 = 0.24), and that genetic background has a larger influence on lifespan than dietary interventions. We identified a significant association for lifespan and RDW on chromosome 18 that explained 4.3% of the diet-adjusted variation in lifespan. Diet-induced changes on metabolic traits, although beneficial, were relatively poor predictors of lifespan, arguing against the long-standing notion that DR works by counteracting the negative effects of obesity. These findings indicate that improving health and extending lifespan are not synonymous and that metabolic parameters may be inappropriate endpoints for evaluating aging interventions in preclinical models and clinical trials.

Regulators of health and lifespan extension in genetically diverse mice on dietary restriction

Preprint on BioRxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology on 28 November 2023 by Di Francesco, A., Deighan, A. G., et al.

Summary Caloric restriction (CR) delays aging and extends healthy lifespan in multiple species. Alternative forms of dietary restriction (DR) such as intermittent fasting (IF) have drawn significant interest as a more sustainable regimen, but the landscape of longevity-promoting dietary interventions remains largely unexplored. Identifying the most robust, efficacious, and experimentally tractable modes of DR is key to better understanding and implementing effective longevity interventions for human healthspan. To that end, we have performed an extensive assessment of DR interventions, investigating the effects of graded levels of CR (20% and 40%) and IF (1 day and 2 days of fasting per week) on the health and survival of 960 genetically diverse female mice. All interventions extended lifespan, although only CR significantly reduced the mortality doubling time. Notably, IF did not extend lifespan in mice with high pre-intervention bodyweight. We carried out extensive phenotyping to determine the health effects of long-term DR and to better understand the mechanisms driving within-diet heterogeneity in lifespan. The top within-diet predictor of lifespan was the ability of mice to maintain bodyweight through periods of handling, an indicator of stress resilience. Additional predictors of long lifespan include specific changes in immune cells, red blood cell distribution width (RDW), and retention of adiposity in late life. We found that lifespan is heritable (h 2 = 0.24), and that genetic background has a larger influence on lifespan than dietary interventions. We identified a significant association for lifespan and RDW on chromosome 18 that explained 4.3% of the diet-adjusted variation in lifespan. Diet-induced changes on metabolic traits, although beneficial, were relatively poor predictors of lifespan, arguing against the long-standing notion that DR works by counteracting the negative effects of obesity. These findings indicate that improving health and extending lifespan are not synonymous and that metabolic parameters may be inappropriate endpoints for evaluating aging interventions in preclinical models and clinical trials.

The developmental cartography of human lymphopoiesis remains incompletely understood. Here, we establish a multimodal map demonstrating that lymphoid specification follows independent direct or stepwise hierarchic routes converging toward the emergence of newly characterized CD117lo multi-lymphoid progenitors (MLPs) that undergo a proliferation arrest before entering the CD127- (NK/ILC/T) or CD127+ (B) lymphoid pathways. While the differentiation of CD127- early lymphoid progenitors is mainly driven by Flt3 signaling, emergence of their CD127+ counterparts is regulated cell-intrinsically and depends exclusively on the divisional history of their upstream precursors, including hematopoietic stem cells. Further, transcriptional mapping of differentiation trajectories reveals that whereas myeloid granulomonocytic lineages follow continuous differentiation pathways, lymphoid trajectories are intrinsically discontinuous and characterized by sequential waves of cell proliferation allowing pre-commitment amplification of lymphoid progenitor pools. Besides identifying new lymphoid specification pathways and regulatory checkpoints, our results demonstrate that NK/ILC/T and B lineages are under fundamentally distinct modes of regulation. (149 words).
© 2023 The Author(s).

Systems-level temporal immune-metabolic profile in Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus infection.

In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America on 12 September 2023 by Ambikan, A. T., Elaldi, N., et al.

Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCHF) caused by CCHF virus (CCHFV) is one of the epidemic-prone diseases prioritized by the World Health Organisation as public health emergency with an urgent need for accelerated research. The trajectory of host response against CCHFV is multifarious and remains unknown. Here, we reported the temporal spectrum of pathogenesis following the CCHFV infection using genome-wide blood transcriptomics analysis followed by advanced systems biology analysis, temporal immune-pathogenic alterations, and context-specific progressive and postinfection genome-scale metabolic models (GSMM) on samples collected during the acute (T0), early convalescent (T1), and convalescent-phase (T2). The interplay between the retinoic acid-inducible gene-I-like/nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptor and tumor necrosis factor signaling governed the trajectory of antiviral immune responses. The rearrangement of intracellular metabolic fluxes toward the amino acid metabolism and metabolic shift toward oxidative phosphorylation and fatty acid oxidation during acute CCHFV infection determine the pathogenicity. The upregulation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle during CCHFV infection, compared to the noninfected healthy control and between the severity groups, indicated an increased energy demand and cellular stress. The upregulation of glycolysis and pyruvate metabolism potentiated energy generation through alternative pathways associated with the severity of the infection. The downregulation of metabolic processes at the convalescent phase identified by blood cell transcriptomics and single-cell type proteomics of five immune cells (CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, CD14+ monocytes, B cells, and NK cells) potentially leads to metabolic rewiring through the recovery due to hyperactivity during the acute phase leading to post-viral fatigue syndrome.

  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Cell Biology
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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