PCK2 maintains intestinal homeostasis and prevents colitis by protecting antibody‐secreting cells from oxidative stress

Maintaining intracellular redox balance is essential for the survival, antibody secretion, and mucosal immune homeostasis of immunoglobulin A (IgA) antibody‐secreting cells (ASCs). However, the relationship between mitochondrial metabolic enzymes and the redox balance in ASCs has yet to be comprehen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Immunology 2024-10, Vol.173 (2), p.339-359
Hauptverfasser: Duan, Kun‐Long, Wang, Tian‐Xiang, You, Jian‐Wei, Wang, Hai‐Ning, Wang, Zhi‐Qiang, Huang, Zi‐Xuan, Zhang, Jin‐Ye, Sun, Yi‐Ping, Xiong, Yue, Guan, Kun‐Liang, Ye, Dan, Chen, Li, Liu, Ronghua, Yuan, Hai‐Xin
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 339
container_title Immunology
container_volume 173
creator Duan, Kun‐Long
Wang, Tian‐Xiang
You, Jian‐Wei
Wang, Hai‐Ning
Wang, Zhi‐Qiang
Huang, Zi‐Xuan
Zhang, Jin‐Ye
Sun, Yi‐Ping
Xiong, Yue
Guan, Kun‐Liang
Ye, Dan
Chen, Li
Liu, Ronghua
Yuan, Hai‐Xin
description Maintaining intracellular redox balance is essential for the survival, antibody secretion, and mucosal immune homeostasis of immunoglobulin A (IgA) antibody‐secreting cells (ASCs). However, the relationship between mitochondrial metabolic enzymes and the redox balance in ASCs has yet to be comprehensively studied. Our study unveils the pivotal role of mitochondrial enzyme PCK2 in regulating ASCs' redox balance and intestinal homeostasis. We discover that PCK2 loss, whether globally or in B cells, exacerbates dextran sodium sulphate (DSS)‐induced colitis due to increased IgA ASC cell death and diminished antibody production. Mechanistically, the absence of PCK2 diverts glutamine into the TCA cycle, leading to heightened TCA flux and excessive mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) production. In addition, PCK2 loss reduces glutamine availability for glutathione (GSH) synthesis, resulting in a decrease of total glutathione level. The elevated mtROS and reduced GSH expose ASCs to overwhelming oxidative stress, culminating in cell apoptosis. Crucially, we found that the mitochondria‐targeted antioxidant Mitoquinone (Mito‐Q) can mitigate the detrimental effects of PCK2 deficiency in IgA ASCs, thereby alleviating colitis in mice. Our findings highlight PCK2 as a key player in IgA ASC survival and provide a potential new target for colitis treatment. This research demonstrates that PCK2 plays an essential role in sustaining the redox balance in IgA antibody‐secreting cells, thereby preventing the exacerbation of colitis and maintaining intestinal homeostasis, suggesting its potential as a therapeutic target in inflammatory bowel disease management.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/imm.13827
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subjects Animals
Antibodies
Antibody-Producing Cells - immunology
Antibody-Producing Cells - metabolism
Apoptosis
B cell
Cell death
Colitis
Colitis - chemically induced
Colitis - immunology
Colitis - metabolism
Dextran
Dextran Sulfate
Dextrans
Disease Models, Animal
Glutamine
Glutathione
Glutathione - metabolism
Homeostasis
Immunoglobulin A
Immunoglobulin A - metabolism
Inflammatory bowel disease
Intestinal Mucosa - immunology
Intestinal Mucosa - metabolism
Intestine
Intestines - immunology
Lymphocytes B
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Mice, Knockout
Mitochondria
Mitochondria - metabolism
Mucosal immunity
mucosal immunology
Oxidative Stress
Reactive oxygen species
Reactive Oxygen Species - metabolism
Sodium sulfate
Survival
Tricarboxylic acid cycle
title PCK2 maintains intestinal homeostasis and prevents colitis by protecting antibody‐secreting cells from oxidative stress
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