Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2022)

MyD88-dependent signaling drives toll-like receptor-induced trained immunity in macrophages

  • Allison M. Owen,
  • Liming Luan,
  • Katherine R. Burelbach,
  • Margaret A. McBride,
  • Cody L. Stothers,
  • Olivia A. Boykin,
  • Kalkena Sivanesam,
  • Kalkena Sivanesam,
  • Jessica F. Schaedel,
  • Tazeen K. Patil,
  • Jingbin Wang,
  • Antonio Hernandez,
  • Naeem K. Patil,
  • Edward R. Sherwood,
  • Edward R. Sherwood,
  • Julia K. Bohannon,
  • Julia K. Bohannon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1044662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Immunocompromised populations are highly vulnerable to developing life-threatening infections. Strategies to protect patients with weak immune responses are urgently needed. Employing trained immunity, whereby innate leukocytes undergo reprogramming upon exposure to a microbial product and respond more robustly to subsequent infection, is a promising approach. Previously, we demonstrated that the TLR4 agonist monophosphoryl lipid A (MPLA) induces trained immunity and confers broad resistance to infection. TLR4 signals through both MyD88- and TRIF-dependent cascades, but the relative contribution of each pathway to induction of trained immunity is unknown. Here, we show that MPLA-induced resistance to Staphylococcus aureus infection is lost in MyD88-KO, but not TRIF-KO, mice. The MyD88-activating agonist CpG (TLR9 agonist), but not TRIF-activating Poly I:C (TLR3 agonist), protects against infection in a macrophage-dependent manner. MPLA- and CpG-induced augmentation of macrophage metabolism and antimicrobial functions is blunted in MyD88-, but not TRIF-KO, macrophages. Augmentation of antimicrobial functions occurs in parallel to metabolic reprogramming and is dependent, in part, on mTOR activation. Splenic macrophages from CpG-treated mice confirmed that TLR/MyD88-induced reprogramming occurs in vivo. TLR/MyD88-triggered metabolic and functional reprogramming was reproduced in human monocyte-derived macrophages. These data show that MyD88-dependent signaling is critical in TLR-mediated trained immunity.

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