作者
Cecilia Morgantini,Jennifer Jager,Xidan Li,Laura Levi,Valerio Azzimato,André Sulen,Emelie Barreby,Connie Xu,Michaela Tencerová,Erik Näslund,Chanchal Kumar,Francisco Verdeguer,Sara Straniero,Kjell Hultenby,Niklas K. Björkström,Ewa Ellis,Mikael Rydén,Claudia Kutter,Tracey Hurrell,Volker M. Lauschke,Jérémie Boucher,Aleš Tomčala,Gabriela Krejčová,Adam Bajgar,Myriam Aouadi
摘要
Liver macrophages (LMs) have been proposed to contribute to metabolic disease through secretion of inflammatory cytokines. However, anti-inflammatory drugs lead to only modest improvements in systemic metabolism. Here we show that LMs do not undergo a proinflammatory phenotypic switch in obesity-induced insulin resistance in flies, mice and humans. Instead, we find that LMs produce non-inflammatory factors, such as insulin-like growth factor–binding protein 7 (IGFBP7), that directly regulate liver metabolism. IGFBP7 binds to the insulin receptor and induces lipogenesis and gluconeogenesis via activation of extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signalling. We further show that IGFBP7 is subject to RNA editing at a higher frequency in insulin-resistant than in insulin-sensitive obese patients (90% versus 30%, respectively), resulting in an IGFBP7 isoform with potentially higher capacity to bind to the insulin receptor. Our study demonstrates that LMs can contribute to insulin resistance independently of their inflammatory status and indicates that non-inflammatory factors produced by macrophages might represent new drug targets for the treatment of metabolic diseases. Proinflammatory activation of liver macrophages and their secretion of proinflammatory cytokines have been linked to obesity. Here Morgantini et al. report a mechanism through which liver macrophages can impair liver metabolism and promote insulin resistance in obesity in the absence of an overt proinflammatory phenotype, through secretion of non-inflammatory factors such as IGFBP7.