Glucose metabolism controls monocyte homeostasis and migration but has no impact on atherosclerosis development in mice

Monocytes directly contribute to atherosclerosis development by their recruitment to plaques in which they differentiate into macrophages. In the present study, we ask how modulating monocyte glucose metabolism could affect their homeostasis and their impact on atherosclerosis. Here we investigate h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-10, Vol.15 (1), p.9027-16, Article 9027
Hauptverfasser: Gallerand, Alexandre, Dolfi, Bastien, Stunault, Marion I., Caillot, Zakariya, Castiglione, Alexia, Strazzulla, Axelle, Chen, Chuqiao, Heo, Gyu Seong, Luehmann, Hannah, Batoul, Flora, Vaillant, Nathalie, Dumont, Adélie, Pilot, Thomas, Merlin, Johanna, Zair, Fairouz N., Gilleron, Jerome, Bertola, Adeline, Carmeliet, Peter, Williams, Jesse W., Arguello, Rafael J., Masson, David, Dombrowicz, David, Yvan-Charvet, Laurent, Doyen, Denis, Haschemi, Arvand, Liu, Yongjian, Guinamard, Rodolphe R., Ivanov, Stoyan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Monocytes directly contribute to atherosclerosis development by their recruitment to plaques in which they differentiate into macrophages. In the present study, we ask how modulating monocyte glucose metabolism could affect their homeostasis and their impact on atherosclerosis. Here we investigate how circulating metabolites control monocyte behavior in blood, bone marrow and peripheral tissues of mice. We find that serum glucose concentrations correlate with monocyte numbers. In diet-restricted mice, monocytes fail to metabolically reprogram from glycolysis to fatty acid oxidation, leading to reduced monocyte numbers in the blood. Mechanistically, Glut1-dependent glucose metabolism helps maintain CD115 membrane expression on monocytes and their progenitors, and regulates monocyte migratory capacity by modulating CCR2 expression. Results from genetic models and pharmacological inhibitors further depict the relative contribution of different metabolic pathways to the regulation of CD115 and CCR2 expression. Meanwhile, Glut1 inhibition does not impact atherosclerotic plaque development in mouse models despite dramatically reducing blood monocyte numbers, potentially due to the remaining monocytes having increased migratory capacity. Together, these data emphasize the role of glucose uptake and intracellular glucose metabolism in controlling monocyte homeostasis and functions. Monocytes participate in plaque formation, and adapt to metabolic changes to alter their functions. Here the authors show, using genetic mouse models and functional analyses, that Glut1-mediated glucose metabolism is important for regulating monocyte homeostasis and migration, but curiously has no impact on atherosclerotic plaque formation.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-53267-5