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Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection

Excessive inflammation is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in many viral infections including influenza. Therefore, there is a need for therapeutic interventions that dampen and redirect inflammatory responses and, ideally, exert antiviral effects. Itaconate is an immunomodulatory metabolite...

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Autores principales: Sohail, Aaqib, Iqbal, Azeem A., Sahini, Nishika, Chen, Fangfang, Tantawy, Mohamed, Waqas, Syed F.H., Winterhoff, Moritz, Ebensen, Thomas, Schultz, Kristin, Geffers, Robert, Schughart, Klaus, Preusse, Matthias, Shehata, Mahmoud, Bähre, Heike, Pils, Marina C., Guzman, Carlos A., Mostafa, Ahmed, Pleschka, Stephan, Falk, Christine, Michelucci, Alessandro, Pessler, Frank
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8846506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35025971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010219
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author Sohail, Aaqib
Iqbal, Azeem A.
Sahini, Nishika
Chen, Fangfang
Tantawy, Mohamed
Waqas, Syed F.H.
Winterhoff, Moritz
Ebensen, Thomas
Schultz, Kristin
Geffers, Robert
Schughart, Klaus
Preusse, Matthias
Shehata, Mahmoud
Bähre, Heike
Pils, Marina C.
Guzman, Carlos A.
Mostafa, Ahmed
Pleschka, Stephan
Falk, Christine
Michelucci, Alessandro
Pessler, Frank
author_facet Sohail, Aaqib
Iqbal, Azeem A.
Sahini, Nishika
Chen, Fangfang
Tantawy, Mohamed
Waqas, Syed F.H.
Winterhoff, Moritz
Ebensen, Thomas
Schultz, Kristin
Geffers, Robert
Schughart, Klaus
Preusse, Matthias
Shehata, Mahmoud
Bähre, Heike
Pils, Marina C.
Guzman, Carlos A.
Mostafa, Ahmed
Pleschka, Stephan
Falk, Christine
Michelucci, Alessandro
Pessler, Frank
author_sort Sohail, Aaqib
collection PubMed
description Excessive inflammation is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in many viral infections including influenza. Therefore, there is a need for therapeutic interventions that dampen and redirect inflammatory responses and, ideally, exert antiviral effects. Itaconate is an immunomodulatory metabolite which also reprograms cell metabolism and inflammatory responses when applied exogenously. We evaluated effects of endogenous itaconate and exogenous application of itaconate and its variants dimethyl- and 4-octyl-itaconate (DI, 4OI) on host responses to influenza A virus (IAV). Infection induced expression of ACOD1, the enzyme catalyzing itaconate synthesis, in monocytes and macrophages, which correlated with viral replication and was abrogated by DI and 4OI treatment. In IAV-infected mice, pulmonary inflammation and weight loss were greater in Acod1(-/-) than in wild-type mice, and DI treatment reduced pulmonary inflammation and mortality. The compounds reversed infection-triggered interferon responses and modulated inflammation in human cells supporting non-productive and productive infection, in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and in human lung tissue. All three itaconates reduced ROS levels and STAT1 phosphorylation, whereas AKT phosphorylation was reduced by 4OI and DI but increased by itaconate. Single-cell RNA sequencing identified monocytes as the main target of infection and the exclusive source of ACOD1 mRNA in peripheral blood. DI treatment silenced IFN-responses predominantly in monocytes, but also in lymphocytes and natural killer cells. Ectopic synthesis of itaconate in A549 cells, which do not physiologically express ACOD1, reduced infection-driven inflammation, and DI reduced IAV- and IFNγ-induced CXCL10 expression in murine macrophages independent of the presence of endogenous ACOD1. The compounds differed greatly in their effects on cellular gene homeostasis and released cytokines/chemokines, but all three markedly reduced release of the pro-inflammatory chemokines CXCL10 (IP-10) and CCL2 (MCP-1). Viral replication did not increase under treatment despite the dramatically repressed IFN responses. In fact, 4OI strongly inhibited viral transcription in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and the compounds reduced viral titers (4OI>Ita>DI) in A549 cells whereas viral transcription was unaffected. Taken together, these results reveal itaconates as immunomodulatory and antiviral interventions for influenza virus infection.
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spelling pubmed-88465062022-02-16 Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection Sohail, Aaqib Iqbal, Azeem A. Sahini, Nishika Chen, Fangfang Tantawy, Mohamed Waqas, Syed F.H. Winterhoff, Moritz Ebensen, Thomas Schultz, Kristin Geffers, Robert Schughart, Klaus Preusse, Matthias Shehata, Mahmoud Bähre, Heike Pils, Marina C. Guzman, Carlos A. Mostafa, Ahmed Pleschka, Stephan Falk, Christine Michelucci, Alessandro Pessler, Frank PLoS Pathog Research Article Excessive inflammation is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in many viral infections including influenza. Therefore, there is a need for therapeutic interventions that dampen and redirect inflammatory responses and, ideally, exert antiviral effects. Itaconate is an immunomodulatory metabolite which also reprograms cell metabolism and inflammatory responses when applied exogenously. We evaluated effects of endogenous itaconate and exogenous application of itaconate and its variants dimethyl- and 4-octyl-itaconate (DI, 4OI) on host responses to influenza A virus (IAV). Infection induced expression of ACOD1, the enzyme catalyzing itaconate synthesis, in monocytes and macrophages, which correlated with viral replication and was abrogated by DI and 4OI treatment. In IAV-infected mice, pulmonary inflammation and weight loss were greater in Acod1(-/-) than in wild-type mice, and DI treatment reduced pulmonary inflammation and mortality. The compounds reversed infection-triggered interferon responses and modulated inflammation in human cells supporting non-productive and productive infection, in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and in human lung tissue. All three itaconates reduced ROS levels and STAT1 phosphorylation, whereas AKT phosphorylation was reduced by 4OI and DI but increased by itaconate. Single-cell RNA sequencing identified monocytes as the main target of infection and the exclusive source of ACOD1 mRNA in peripheral blood. DI treatment silenced IFN-responses predominantly in monocytes, but also in lymphocytes and natural killer cells. Ectopic synthesis of itaconate in A549 cells, which do not physiologically express ACOD1, reduced infection-driven inflammation, and DI reduced IAV- and IFNγ-induced CXCL10 expression in murine macrophages independent of the presence of endogenous ACOD1. The compounds differed greatly in their effects on cellular gene homeostasis and released cytokines/chemokines, but all three markedly reduced release of the pro-inflammatory chemokines CXCL10 (IP-10) and CCL2 (MCP-1). Viral replication did not increase under treatment despite the dramatically repressed IFN responses. In fact, 4OI strongly inhibited viral transcription in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and the compounds reduced viral titers (4OI>Ita>DI) in A549 cells whereas viral transcription was unaffected. Taken together, these results reveal itaconates as immunomodulatory and antiviral interventions for influenza virus infection. Public Library of Science 2022-01-13 /pmc/articles/PMC8846506/ /pubmed/35025971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010219 Text en © 2022 Sohail et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sohail, Aaqib
Iqbal, Azeem A.
Sahini, Nishika
Chen, Fangfang
Tantawy, Mohamed
Waqas, Syed F.H.
Winterhoff, Moritz
Ebensen, Thomas
Schultz, Kristin
Geffers, Robert
Schughart, Klaus
Preusse, Matthias
Shehata, Mahmoud
Bähre, Heike
Pils, Marina C.
Guzman, Carlos A.
Mostafa, Ahmed
Pleschka, Stephan
Falk, Christine
Michelucci, Alessandro
Pessler, Frank
Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title_full Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title_fullStr Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title_full_unstemmed Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title_short Itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza A virus infection
title_sort itaconate and derivatives reduce interferon responses and inflammation in influenza a virus infection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8846506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35025971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010219
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