Cell Reports (Feb 2025)

Rev-erb-α antagonism in alveolar macrophages protects against pneumococcal infection in elderly mice

  • Fabiola Silva Angulo,
  • Claudine Vanessa Joseph,
  • Lou Delval,
  • Lucie Deruyter,
  • Séverine Heumel,
  • Marie Bicharel,
  • Patricia Brito Rodrigues,
  • Valentin Sencio,
  • Tom Bourguignon,
  • Marina Gomes Machado,
  • Marie Fourcot,
  • Stéphane Delhaye,
  • Sophie Salomé-Desnoulez,
  • Philippe Valet,
  • Serge Adnot,
  • Isabelle Wolowczuk,
  • Jean-Claude Sirard,
  • Muriel Pichavant,
  • Bart Staels,
  • Joel T. Haas,
  • Ruxandra Gref,
  • Jimmy Vandel,
  • Arnaud Machelart,
  • Hélène Duez,
  • Benoit Pourcet,
  • François Trottein

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44, no. 2
p. 115273

Abstract

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Summary: Circadian rhythms control the diurnal nature of many physiological, metabolic, and immune processes. We hypothesized that age-related impairments in circadian rhythms are associated with high susceptibility to bacterial respiratory tract infections. Our data show that the time-of-day difference in the control of Streptococcus pneumoniae infection is altered in elderly mice. A lung circadian transcriptome analysis revealed that aging alters the daily oscillations in the expression of a specific set of genes and that some pathways that are rhythmic in young-adult mice are non-rhythmic or time shifted in elderly mice. In particular, the circadian expression of the clock component Rev-erb-α and apelin/apelin receptor was altered in elderly mice. In young-adult mice, we discovered an interaction between Rev-erb-α and the apelinergic axis that controls host defenses against S. pneumoniae via alveolar macrophages. Pharmacological repression of Rev-erb-α in elderly mice resulted in greater resistance to pneumococcal infection. These data suggest the causative role of age-associated impairments in circadian rhythms on respiratory infections and have clinical relevance.

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