Author:
Jimenez-Duran Gisela,Kozole Joseph,Peltier-Heap Rachel,Dickinson Eleanor R.,Kwiatkowski Christopher R.,Zappacosta Francesca,Annan Roland S.,Galwey Nicholas W.,Nichols Eva-Maria,Modis Louise K.,Triantafilou Martha,Triantafilou Kathy,Booty Lee M.
Abstract
The complement system is an ancient and critical part of innate immunity. Recent studies have highlighted novel roles of complement beyond lysis of invading pathogens with implications in regulating the innate immune response, as well as contributing to metabolic reprogramming of T-cells, synoviocytes as well as cells in the CNS. These findings hint that complement can be an immunometabolic regulator, but whether this is also the case for the terminal step of the complement pathway, the membrane attack complex (MAC) is not clear. In this study we focused on determining whether MAC is an immunometabolic regulator of the innate immune response in human monocyte-derived macrophages. Here, we uncover previously uncharacterized metabolic changes and mitochondrial dysfunction occurring downstream of MAC deposition. These alterations in glycolytic flux and mitochondrial morphology and function mediate NLRP3 inflammasome activation, pro-inflammatory cytokine release and gasdermin D formation. Together, these data elucidate a novel signalling cascade, with metabolic alterations at its center, in MAC-stimulated human macrophages that drives an inflammatory consequence in an immunologically relevant cell type.
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
4 articles.
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