Immunometabolic adaptation in monocytes underpins functional changes during pregnancy
Metabolic heterogeneity is a determinant of immune cell function. The normal physiological metabolic reprogramming of pregnancy that ensures the fuel requirements of mother and baby are met, might also underpin changes in immunity that occur with pregnancy and manifest as altered responses to pathog...
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Veröffentlicht in: | iScience 2024-05, Vol.27 (5), p.109779-109779, Article 109779 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Metabolic heterogeneity is a determinant of immune cell function. The normal physiological metabolic reprogramming of pregnancy that ensures the fuel requirements of mother and baby are met, might also underpin changes in immunity that occur with pregnancy and manifest as altered responses to pathogens and changes to autoimmune disease symptoms. Using peripheral blood from pregnant women at term, we reveal that monocytes lose M2-like and gain M1-like properties accompanied by reductions in mitochondrial mass, maximal respiration, and cardiolipin content in pregnancy; glycolysis is unperturbed. We establish that muramyl dipeptide (MDP)-stimulated cytokine production relies on oxidative metabolism, then show in pregnancy reduced cytokine production in response to MDP but not LPS. Overall, mitochondrially centered metabolic capabilities of late gestation monocytes are down-regulated revealing natural plasticity in monocyte phenotype and function that could reveal targets for improving pregnancy outcomes but also yield alternative therapeutic approaches to diverse metabolic and/or immune-mediated diseases beyond pregnancy.
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•Metabolic changes occur in pregnancy to meet the fuel requirements of mother and baby•Immunometabolic remodeling underpins functional changes in the maternal immune system•In human monocytes this is centered on mitochondria and OXPHOS•It reveals natural plasticity that could be harnessed in many disease settings
Reproductive medicine; Physiology; Immunology; Cell biology |
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ISSN: | 2589-0042 2589-0042 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.isci.2024.109779 |