作者
Julia Brunner,Andrea Vogel,Alexander Lercher,Michael Caldera,Ana Korosec,Marlene Pühringer,Melanie Hofmann,Alexander Hajto,Markus Kieler,Lucia Quemada Garrido,Martina Kerndl,Mario Kuttke,Ildikó Mesteri,Maria W. Górna,Marta Kulik,P.M. Dominiak,Amanda E. Brandon,Emma Estévez,Casey L. Egan,Флориан Грубер,Martina Schweiger,Jörg Menche,Andreas Bergthaler,Thomas Weichhart,Kristaps Klavins,Mark A. Febbraio,Omar Sharif,Gernot Schabbauer
摘要
Adipose tissue macrophages (ATMs) display tremendous heterogeneity depending on signals in their local microenvironment and contribute to the pathogenesis of obesity. The phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signalling pathway, antagonized by the phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN), is important for metabolic responses to obesity. We hypothesized that fluctuations in macrophage-intrinsic PI3K activity via PTEN could alter the trajectory of metabolic disease by driving distinct ATM populations. Using mice harbouring macrophage-specific PTEN deletion or bone marrow chimeras carrying additional PTEN copies, we demonstrate that sustained PI3K activity in macrophages preserves metabolic health in obesity by preventing lipotoxicity. Myeloid PI3K signalling promotes a beneficial ATM population characterized by lipid uptake, catabolism and high expression of the scavenger macrophage receptor with collagenous structure (MARCO). Dual MARCO and myeloid PTEN deficiencies prevent the generation of lipid-buffering ATMs, reversing the beneficial actions of elevated myeloid PI3K activity in metabolic disease. Thus, macrophage-intrinsic PI3K signalling boosts metabolic health by driving ATM programmes associated with MARCO-dependent lipid uptake. The PI3K–PTEN signalling pathway is a central regulator of metabolic homeostasis. Brunner et al. find that cell-intrinsic PI3K signalling allows adipose tissue macrophages to buffer obesity-induced lipotoxicity by promoting lipid uptake and catabolism.