Author:
Ge Yi-Ling,Liu Yong,Zhang Bin,Xu Jin,He Si-Yuan,Cao Qing-Lin,Li Pei-Jie,Bu Ying-Rui,Bai Yun-Gang,Zhang Lin,Yu Zhi-Bin,Xie Man-Jiang
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundHypoxic stress-induced inflammation had been considered to play an important role in the onset and progression of altitude-related illnesses, but the origin of inflammatory cytokines, the specific responding cell types, and molecular mechanisms remain unknown. Mitochondria are responsible for oxygen consumption and recently reported to be the master regulators of inflammation, but it is not clear whether and how mitochondrial organelles sense the hypoxic stress and then control the inflammation.MethodsHuman subjects and mouse models were exposed to real or simulated altitude of 5500 m. Bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) and monocyte RAW264.7 cells were cultured under 1% oxygen hypoxic conditions. Myeloid-specificBmal1knock-out mice were generated by crossingBmal1flox/floxmice with Lyz2-Cre mice. Inflammation was investigated by assessing inflammatory mediators, monocyte activities, and leukocyte infiltrating. Mitochondrial unfolded protein response was examined by measuring stress markers, such as LONP1, AFG3L2, and HSP60. The target molecular mechanisms were identified by performing bioinformatic analyses, ChIP assays, and gain/loss-of-function experiments.Results1) Monocytes in peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMCs) were more sensitive and contributed promptly to circulating inflammation in response to acute hypobaric hypoxia. 2) Hypoxic stress triggered the mitochondrial unfolded protein response and then induced the mito-inflammation (NLRP3 inflammasome) in monocytes. 3) Activation ofBmal1drove mitochondrial stress and mito-inflammation by promoting Fis1-mediated mitochondrial fission in monocytes under hypoxia. 4) BHLHE40, a stress-responsive transcription factor directly targeted by HIF-1α, stimulatedBmal1transcription in monocytes under hypobaric hypoxia. 5) Myeloid-specificBmal1deletion alleviated systemic circulating and vascular inflammation under acute hypobaric hypoxia.ConclusionBHLHE40, a transcription factor associated with hypoxia, stimulatedBmal1, which in turn triggered the mitochondrial unfolded protein response and drove the mito-inflammation in monocytes by promoting Fis1-mediated mitochondrial fission. Our work provides a novel mechanism which may develop the circadian targeting drugs for altitude or hypoxia-related diseases.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory