生物
细胞因子
巨噬细胞极化
巨噬细胞
细胞生物学
肌酸
免疫学
生物化学
内分泌学
体外
作者
Liangliang Ji,Xinbin Zhao,Bin Zhang,Lan Kang,Wenxin Song,Baohong Zhao,Wei Xie,Ligong Chen,Xiaoyu Hu
出处
期刊:Immunity
[Cell Press]
日期:2019-08-01
卷期号:51 (2): 272-284.e7
被引量:164
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.immuni.2019.06.007
摘要
Summary
Macrophage polarization is accompanied by drastic changes in L-arginine metabolism. Two L-arginine catalytic enzymes, iNOS and arginase 1, are well-characterized hallmark molecules of classically and alternatively activated macrophages, respectively. The third metabolic fate of L-arginine is the generation of creatine that acts as a key source of cellular energy reserve, yet little is known about the role of creatine in the immune system. Here, genetic, genomic, metabolic, and immunological analyses revealed that creatine reprogrammed macrophage polarization by suppressing M(interferon-γ [IFN-γ]) yet promoting M(interleukin-4 [IL-4]) effector functions. Mechanistically, creatine inhibited the induction of immune effector molecules, including iNOS, by suppressing IFN-γ-JAK-STAT1 transcription-factor signaling while supporting IL-4-STAT6-activated arginase 1 expression by promoting chromatin remodeling. Depletion of intracellular creatine by ablation of the creatine transporter Slc6a8 altered macrophage-mediated immune responses in vivo. These results uncover a previously uncharacterized role for creatine in macrophage polarization by modulating cellular responses to cytokines such as IFN-γ and IL-4.
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