Abstract

Microglia, the innate immune cells of the CNS, exhibit long-term response changes indicative of innate immune memory (IIM). Our previous studies revealed IIM patterns of microglia with opposing immune phenotypes: trained immunity after a low dose and immune tolerance after a high dose challenge with pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMP). Compelling evidence shows that innate immune cells adopt features of IIM via immunometabolic control. However, immunometabolic reprogramming involved in the regulation of IIM in microglia has not been fully addressed. Here, we evaluated the impact of dose-dependent microglial priming with ultra-low (ULP, 1 fg/mL) and high (HP, 100 ng/mL) lipopolysaccharide (LPS) doses on immunometabolic rewiring. Furthermore, we addressed the role of PI3Kγ on immunometabolic control using naïve primary microglia derived from newborn wild-type mice, PI3Kγ-deficient mice and mice carrying a targeted mutation causing loss of lipid kinase activity. We found that ULP-induced IIM triggered an enhancement of oxygen consumption and ATP production. In contrast, HP was followed by suppressed oxygen consumption and glycolytic activity indicative of immune tolerance. PI3Kγ inhibited glycolysis due to modulation of cAMP-dependent pathways. However, no impact of specific PI3Kγ signaling on immunometabolic rewiring due to dose-dependent LPS priming was detected. In conclusion, immunometabolic reprogramming of microglia is involved in IIM in a dose-dependent manner via the glycolytic pathway, oxygen consumption and ATP production: ULP (ultra-low-dose priming) increases it, while HP reduces it.

Highlights

  • The signaling protein Phosphoinositide 3-kinase γ (PI3Kγ) provoked a marked inhibition of glycolysis possibly due to modulation of cAMP-dependent pathways

  • Metabolic profiling using a Seahorse analyzer revealed that ULP induced a marked enhancement of oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and an increased ATP production in naïve microglial cells derived from newborn C57BL/6 mice (Figure 1B,D)

  • We found that PI3Kγ knockdown led to enhanced glycolytic enzyme expression, increase of the extracellular acidification rates (ECAR), HIF-1α upregulation, phosphate pathway (PPP) reinforcement via diminished carbohydrate kinaselike protein (CARKL)

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Summary

Introduction

The self-renewing innate immune cells of the central nervous system (CNS), exhibit immune memory with implications for brain homeostasis and pathologies. This resident macrophage-like population confers innate immunity to the CNS as the first line of defense against invading pathogens [1,2]. They control the neuronal patterning and wiring of the brain in early development and fulfill supportive functions for maintenance of tissue homeostasis, tissue support, neuroplasticity and neuroprotection due to their ability to surveil the microenvironment for alterations [3,4,5,6,7].

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