An inherited mitochondrial DNA mutation remodels inflammatory cytokine responses in macrophages and in vivo in mice

一种遗传性线粒体DNA突变可重塑巨噬细胞和小鼠体内的炎症细胞因子反应。

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作者:Eloïse Marques ,Stephen P Burr ,Alva M Casey ,Richard J Stopforth ,Chak Shun Yu ,Keira Turner ,Dane M Wolf ,Marisa Dilucca ,Vincent Paupe ,Suvagata Roy Chowdhury ,Victoria J Tyrrell ,Robbin Kramer ,Yamini M Kanse ,Chinmayi Pednekar ,Chris A Powell ,James B Stewart ,Julien Prudent ,Michael P Murphy ,Michal Minczuk ,Valerie B O'Donnell ,Clare E Bryant ,Patrick F Chinnery ,Arthur Kaser ,Alexander von Kriegsheim ,Dylan G Ryan

Abstract

Impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics in macrophages promotes hyperinflammatory cytokine responses, but whether inherited mtDNA mutations drive similar phenotypes is unknown. Here, we profiled macrophages harbouring a heteroplasmic mitochondrial tRNAAla mutation (m.5019A>G) to address this question. These macrophages exhibit combined respiratory chain defects, reduced oxidative phosphorylation, disrupted cristae architecture, and compensatory metabolic adaptations in central carbon metabolism. Upon inflammatory activation, m.5019A>G macrophages produce elevated type I interferon (IFN), while exhibiting reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxylipins. Mechanistically, suppression of pro-IL-1β and COX2 requires autocrine IFN-β signalling. IFN-β induction is biphasic: an early TLR4-IRF3 driven phase, and a later response involving mitochondrial nucleic acids and the cGAS-STING pathway. In vivo, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge of m.5019A>G mice results in elevated type I IFN signalling and exacerbated sickness behaviour. These findings reveal that a pathogenic mtDNA mutation promotes an imbalanced innate immune response, which has potential implications for the progression of pathology in mtDNA disease patients.

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