AMPK activation induces RALDH+ tolerogenic dendritic cells by rewiring glucose and lipid metabolism

Author:

Brombacher Eline C.1ORCID,Patente Thiago A.1ORCID,van der Ham Alwin J.1ORCID,Moll Tijmen J.A.1ORCID,Otto Frank1ORCID,Verheijen Fenne W.M.2ORCID,Zaal Esther A.2ORCID,de Ru Arnoud H.3ORCID,Tjokrodirijo Rayman T.N.3ORCID,Berkers Celia R.2ORCID,van Veelen Peter A.3ORCID,Guigas Bruno1ORCID,Everts Bart1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leiden University Medical Center 1 Department of Parasitology, , Leiden, Netherlands

2. Utrecht University 2 Department Biomolecular Health Sciences, , Utrecht, Netherlands

3. Center for Proteomics and Metabolomics, Leiden University Medical Center 3 , Leiden, Netherlands

Abstract

Dendritic cell (DC) activation and function are underpinned by profound changes in cellular metabolism. Several studies indicate that the ability of DCs to promote tolerance is dependent on catabolic metabolism. Yet the contribution of AMP-activated kinase (AMPK), a central energy sensor promoting catabolism, to DC tolerogenicity remains unknown. Here, we show that AMPK activation renders human monocyte-derived DCs tolerogenic as evidenced by an enhanced ability to drive differentiation of regulatory T cells, a process dependent on increased RALDH activity. This is accompanied by several metabolic changes, including increased breakdown of glycerophospholipids, enhanced mitochondrial fission–dependent fatty acid oxidation, and upregulated glucose catabolism. This metabolic rewiring is functionally important as we found interference with these metabolic processes to reduce to various degrees AMPK-induced RALDH activity as well as the tolerogenic capacity of moDCs. Altogether, our findings reveal a key role for AMPK signaling in shaping DC tolerogenicity and suggest AMPK as a target to direct DC-driven tolerogenic responses in therapeutic settings.

Funder

Leids Universitair Medisch Centrum

Exacte en Natuurwetenschappen

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

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