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ImmuneCited

Particulate matter-induced metabolic recoding of epigenetics in macrophages drives pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Myungkyung Noh, Jeong Yeon Sim, Jisung Kim, Jee Hwan Ahn, Hye-Young Min et al.
Other Journal of hazardous materials 2024 20 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Other
Population
PM-induced COPD mouse model and human COPD patients
Intervention
Particulate matter-induced metabolic recoding of epigenetics in macrophages drives pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. None
Comparator
PM-exposed COPD model controls
Primary Outcome
PM-induced COPD macrophage reprogramming
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a group of illnesses associated with unresolved inflammation in response to toxic environmental stimuli. Persistent exposure to PM is a major risk factor for COPD, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Using our established mouse model of PM-induced COPD, we find that repeated PM exposure provokes macrophage-centered chronic inflammation and COPD development. Mechanistically, chronic PM exposure induces transcriptional downregulation of HAAO, KMO, KYNU, and QPRT in macrophages, which are the enzymes of de novo NAD+ synthesis pathway (kynurenine pathway; KP), via elevated chromatin binding of the CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) near the transcriptional regulatory regions of the enzymes. Subsequent reduction of NAD+ and SIRT1 function increases histone acetylation, resulting in elevated expression of pro-inflammatory genes in PM-exposed macrophages. Activation of SIRT1 by nutraceutical resveratrol mitigated PM-induced chronic inflammation and COPD development. In agreement, increased levels of histone acetylation and decreased expression of KP enzymes were observed in pulmonary macrophages of COPD patients. We newly provide an evidence that dysregulated NAD+ metabolism and consecutive SIRT1 deficiency significantly contribute to the pathological activation of macrophages during PM-mediated COPD pathogenesis. Additionally, targeting PM-induced intertwined metabolic and epigenetic reprogramming in macrophages is an effective strategy for COPD treatment.

TL;DR

It is found that repeated PM exposure provokes macrophage-centered chronic inflammation and COPD development, and evidence is provided that dysregulated NAD+ metabolism and consecutive SIRT1 deficiency significantly contribute to the pathological activation of macrophages during PM-mediated COPD pathogenesis.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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