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Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma

Modulation of the immune response to initiate and halt the inflammatory process occurs both at the site of injury as well as systemically. Due to the evolving role of cellular metabolism in regulating cell fate and function, tendon injuries that undergo normal and aberrant repair were evaluated by m...

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Autores principales: Crossley, Janna L., Ostashevskaya-Gohstand, Sonya, Comazzetto, Stefano, Hook, Jessica S., Guo, Lei, Vishlaghi, Neda, Juan, Conan, Xu, Lin, Horswill, Alexander R., Hoxhaj, Gerta, Moreland, Jessica G., Tower, Robert J., Levi, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10619500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37707952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169208
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author Crossley, Janna L.
Ostashevskaya-Gohstand, Sonya
Comazzetto, Stefano
Hook, Jessica S.
Guo, Lei
Vishlaghi, Neda
Juan, Conan
Xu, Lin
Horswill, Alexander R.
Hoxhaj, Gerta
Moreland, Jessica G.
Tower, Robert J.
Levi, Benjamin
author_facet Crossley, Janna L.
Ostashevskaya-Gohstand, Sonya
Comazzetto, Stefano
Hook, Jessica S.
Guo, Lei
Vishlaghi, Neda
Juan, Conan
Xu, Lin
Horswill, Alexander R.
Hoxhaj, Gerta
Moreland, Jessica G.
Tower, Robert J.
Levi, Benjamin
author_sort Crossley, Janna L.
collection PubMed
description Modulation of the immune response to initiate and halt the inflammatory process occurs both at the site of injury as well as systemically. Due to the evolving role of cellular metabolism in regulating cell fate and function, tendon injuries that undergo normal and aberrant repair were evaluated by metabolic profiling to determine its impact on healing outcomes. Metabolomics revealed an increasing abundance of the immunomodulatory metabolite itaconate within the injury site. Subsequent single-cell RNA-Seq and molecular and metabolomic validation identified a highly mature neutrophil subtype, not macrophages, as the primary producers of itaconate following trauma. These mature itaconate-producing neutrophils were highly inflammatory, producing cytokines that promote local injury fibrosis before cycling back to the bone marrow. In the bone marrow, itaconate was shown to alter hematopoiesis, skewing progenitor cells down myeloid lineages, thereby regulating systemic inflammation. Therapeutically, exogenous itaconate was found to reduce injury-site inflammation, promoting tenogenic differentiation and impairing aberrant vascularization with disease-ameliorating effects. These results present an intriguing role for cycling neutrophils as a sensor of inflammation induced by injury — potentially regulating immune cell production in the bone marrow through delivery of endogenously produced itaconate — and demonstrate a therapeutic potential for exogenous itaconate following tendon injury
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spelling pubmed-106195002023-11-02 Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma Crossley, Janna L. Ostashevskaya-Gohstand, Sonya Comazzetto, Stefano Hook, Jessica S. Guo, Lei Vishlaghi, Neda Juan, Conan Xu, Lin Horswill, Alexander R. Hoxhaj, Gerta Moreland, Jessica G. Tower, Robert J. Levi, Benjamin JCI Insight Research Article Modulation of the immune response to initiate and halt the inflammatory process occurs both at the site of injury as well as systemically. Due to the evolving role of cellular metabolism in regulating cell fate and function, tendon injuries that undergo normal and aberrant repair were evaluated by metabolic profiling to determine its impact on healing outcomes. Metabolomics revealed an increasing abundance of the immunomodulatory metabolite itaconate within the injury site. Subsequent single-cell RNA-Seq and molecular and metabolomic validation identified a highly mature neutrophil subtype, not macrophages, as the primary producers of itaconate following trauma. These mature itaconate-producing neutrophils were highly inflammatory, producing cytokines that promote local injury fibrosis before cycling back to the bone marrow. In the bone marrow, itaconate was shown to alter hematopoiesis, skewing progenitor cells down myeloid lineages, thereby regulating systemic inflammation. Therapeutically, exogenous itaconate was found to reduce injury-site inflammation, promoting tenogenic differentiation and impairing aberrant vascularization with disease-ameliorating effects. These results present an intriguing role for cycling neutrophils as a sensor of inflammation induced by injury — potentially regulating immune cell production in the bone marrow through delivery of endogenously produced itaconate — and demonstrate a therapeutic potential for exogenous itaconate following tendon injury American Society for Clinical Investigation 2023-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10619500/ /pubmed/37707952 http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169208 Text en © 2023 Crossley et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Crossley, Janna L.
Ostashevskaya-Gohstand, Sonya
Comazzetto, Stefano
Hook, Jessica S.
Guo, Lei
Vishlaghi, Neda
Juan, Conan
Xu, Lin
Horswill, Alexander R.
Hoxhaj, Gerta
Moreland, Jessica G.
Tower, Robert J.
Levi, Benjamin
Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title_full Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title_fullStr Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title_full_unstemmed Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title_short Itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
title_sort itaconate-producing neutrophils regulate local and systemic inflammation following trauma
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10619500/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37707952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.169208
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