Journal of Lipid Research (Jan 2025)

Type I IFN induces long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 1 to generate a phosphatidic acid reservoir for lipotoxic saturated fatty acids

  • Shelley Barnhart,
  • Masami Shimizu-Albergine,
  • Eyal Kedar,
  • Vishal Kothari,
  • Baohai Shao,
  • Melissa Krueger,
  • Cheng-Chieh Hsu,
  • Jingjing Tang,
  • Jenny E. Kanter,
  • Farah Kramer,
  • Danijel Djukovic,
  • Vadim Pascua,
  • Yueh-Ming Loo,
  • Lucrezia Colonna,
  • Sadie J. Van den Bogaerde,
  • Jie An,
  • Michael Gale, Jr.,
  • Karen Reue,
  • Edward A. Fisher,
  • Sina A. Gharib,
  • Keith B. Elkon,
  • Karin E. Bornfeldt

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 66, no. 1
p. 100730

Abstract

Read online

Long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 1 (ACSL1) catalyzes the conversion of long-chain fatty acids to acyl-CoAs. ACSL1 is required for β-oxidation in tissues that rely on fatty acids as fuel, but no consensus exists on why ACSL1 is induced by inflammatory mediators in immune cells. We used a comprehensive and unbiased approach to investigate the role of ACSL1 induction by interferon type I (IFN-I) in myeloid cells in vitro and in a mouse model of IFN-I overproduction. Our results show that IFN-I induces ACSL1 in macrophages via its interferon-α/β receptor, and consequently that expression of ACSL1 is increased in myeloid cells from individuals with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), an autoimmune condition characterized by increased IFN production. Taking advantage of a myeloid cell-targeted ACSL1-deficient mouse model and a series of lipidomics, proteomics, metabolomics and functional analyses, we show that IFN-I leverages induction of ACSL1 to increase accumulation of fully saturated phosphatidic acid species in macrophages. Conversely, ACSL1 induction is not needed for IFN-I’s ability to induce the prototypical IFN-stimulated protein signature or to suppress proliferation or macrophage metabolism. Loss of ACSL1 in IFN-I stimulated myeloid cells enhances apoptosis and secondary necrosis in vitro, especially in the presence of increased saturated fatty acid load, and in a mouse model of atherosclerosis associated with IFN overproduction, resulting in larger lesion necrotic cores. We propose that ACSL1 induction is a mechanism used by IFN-I to increase phosphatidic acid saturation while protecting the cells from saturated fatty acid-induced cell death.

Keywords