Chronic IFNα treatment induces leukopoiesis, increased plasma succinate and immune cell metabolic rewiring

Author:

Yennemadi Anjali S.,Jameson Gráinne,Glass Mary,De Pasquale Carolina,Keane Joseph,Bianchi Massimiliano,Leisching GinaORCID

Abstract

AbstractAlthough clinically effective, the actions of IFNα, either produced endogenously or by therapeutic delivery, remain poorly understood. Emblematic of this research gap is the disparate array of notable side effects that occur in susceptible individuals, such as neuropsychiatric consequences, autoimmune phenomena, and infectious complications. We hypothesised that these complications are driven at least in part by dysregulated cellular metabolism. Male Wistar rats were treated with either 170,000 IU/kg human recombinant IFNα-2a or BSA/saline (0.9% NaCl) three times per week for three weeks. Bone marrow (BM) immune cells were isolated from the excised femurs for glycolytic rate and mitochondrial function assessment using Agilent Seahorse Technology. Frequencies of immune cell populations were assessed by flow cytometry to determine whether leukopoietic changes had occurred in both blood and BM. Plasma levels of lactate and succinate were also determined. BMDMs were metabolically assessed as above, as well as their metabolic response to an antigenic stimulus (iH37Rv). We observed that BM immune cells from IFN-treated rats exhibit a hypermetabolic state (increased basal OCR/GlycoPER) with decreased mitochondrial metabolic respiration and increased non-mitochondrial OCR. Flow cytometry results indicated an increase in immature granulocytes (RP1-SSChi CD45lo) and classical monocytes (CD43lo RP1hi) in the blood, together with increased succinate levels in the plasma. BMDMs from IFN-treated rats retained the hypermetabolic phenotype after differentiation and failed to induce a step-up in glycolysis and mitochondrial respiration after bacterial stimulation. This work provides the first evidence of the effects of IFNα treatment in inducing hypermetabolic immune features that are associated with markers of inflammation, leukopoiesis, and defective responses to bacterial stimulation.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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