作者
Leilei Chen,Carmen Morcelle,Zhou‐Li Cheng,Xiufei Chen,Yanping Xu,Yajing Gao,Junbin Song,Zhijun Li,Matthew D. Smith,Miao Shi,Yezhang Zhu,Neng Zhou,Meng Cheng,Chenxi He,Kwei‐Yan Liu,Guoping Lü,Lei Zhang,Cheng Zhang,Jinye Zhang,Yiping Sun,Tuan Qi,Yingying Lyu,Zhi-Zhong Ren,Xianming Tan,Jiayong Yin,Fei Lan,Ying Liu,Hui Yang,Maoxiang Qian,Cai‐Wen Duan,Xing Chang,Yufeng Zhou,Li Shen,Albert S. Baldwin,Kun‐Liang Guan,Yue Xiong,Dan Ye
摘要
As one of the most induced genes in activated macrophages, immune-responsive gene 1 (IRG1) encodes a mitochondrial metabolic enzyme catalysing the production of itaconic acid (ITA). Although ITA has an anti-inflammatory property, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Here we show that ITA is a potent inhibitor of the TET-family DNA dioxygenases. ITA binds to the same site on TET2 as the co-substrate α-ketoglutarate, inhibiting TET2 catalytic activity. Lipopolysaccharide treatment, which induces Irg1 expression and ITA accumulation, inhibits Tet activity in macrophages. Transcriptome analysis reveals that TET2 is a major target of ITA in suppressing lipopolysaccharide-induced genes, including those regulated by the NF-κB and STAT signalling pathways. In vivo, ITA decreases the levels of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, reduces lipopolysaccharide-induced acute pulmonary oedema as well as lung and liver injury, and protects mice against lethal endotoxaemia, depending on the catalytic activity of Tet2. Our study thus identifies ITA as an immune modulatory metabolite that selectively inhibits TET enzymes to dampen the inflammatory responses. Chen et al. report that the immune modulatory metabolite itaconic acid selectively inhibits the activity of TET DNA dioxygenases to repress the inflammatory responses.