Chronic stress primes innate immune responses in mice and humans

慢性应激会增强小鼠和人类的先天免疫反应。

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作者:Tessa J Barrett ,Emma M Corr ,Coen van Solingen ,Florencia Schlamp ,Emily J Brown ,Graeme J Koelwyn ,Angela H Lee ,Lianne C Shanley ,Tanya M Spruill ,Fazli Bozal ,Annika de Jong ,Alexandra A C Newman ,Kamelia Drenkova ,Michele Silvestro ,Bhama Ramkhelawon ,Harmony R Reynolds ,Judith S Hochman ,Matthias Nahrendorf ,Filip K Swirski ,Edward A Fisher ,Jeffrey S Berger ,Kathryn J Moore

Abstract

Psychological stress (PS) is associated with systemic inflammation and accelerates inflammatory disease progression (e.g., atherosclerosis). The mechanisms underlying stress-mediated inflammation and future health risk are poorly understood. Monocytes are key in sustaining systemic inflammation, and recent studies demonstrate that they maintain the memory of inflammatory insults, leading to a heightened inflammatory response upon rechallenge. We show that PS induces remodeling of the chromatin landscape and transcriptomic reprogramming of monocytes, skewing them to a primed hyperinflammatory phenotype. Monocytes from stressed mice and humans exhibit a characteristic inflammatory transcriptomic signature and are hyperresponsive upon stimulation with Toll-like receptor ligands. RNA and ATAC sequencing reveal that monocytes from stressed mice and humans exhibit activation of metabolic pathways (mTOR and PI3K) and reduced chromatin accessibility at mitochondrial respiration-associated loci. Collectively, our findings suggest that PS primes the reprogramming of myeloid cells to a hyperresponsive inflammatory state, which may explain how PS confers inflammatory disease risk. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03022552.

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