作者
Su-Man Kim,Shinhye Park,Seung-Ho Hwang,Eun Young Lee,Jong Hwan Kim,Ga Seul Lee,Gil Jae Lee,Dong-Ho Chang,Jae-Geun Lee,Jungwon Hwang,Youngjin Lee,Minsoo Kyung,Eunkyoung Kim,Jae-Hoon Kim,Tae‐Hwan Kim,Jeong Hee Moon,Byoung-Chan Kim,GwangPyo Ko,Seon‐Young Kim,Ji-Hwan Ryu,Jeong-Soo Lee,Chul–Ho Lee,Jeong‐Yoon Kim,Sung Hoon Kim,Won–Jae Lee,Myung Hee Kim
摘要
Commensal bacteria are critically involved in the establishment of tolerance against inflammatory challenges, the molecular mechanisms of which are just being uncovered. All kingdoms of life produce aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs). Thus far, the non-translational roles of ARSs have largely been reported in eukaryotes. Here, we report that the threonyl-tRNA synthetase (AmTARS) of the gut-associated bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila is secreted and functions to monitor and modulate immune homeostasis. Secreted AmTARS triggers M2 macrophage polarization and orchestrates the production of anti-inflammatory IL-10 via its unique, evolutionary-acquired regions, which mediates specific interactions with TLR2. This interaction activates the MAPK and PI3K/AKT signaling pathways, which converge on CREB, leading to an efficient production of IL-10 and suppression of the central inflammatory mediator NF-κB. AmTARS restores IL-10-positive macrophages, increases IL-10 levels in the serum, and attenuates the pathological effects in colitis mice. Thus, commensal tRNA synthetases can act as intrinsic mediators that maintain homeostasis.