Cell Reports (Feb 2024)

Lactic acid induces transcriptional repression of macrophage inflammatory response via histone acetylation

  • Weiwei Shi,
  • Tiffany J. Cassmann,
  • Aditya Vijay Bhagwate,
  • Taro Hitosugi,
  • W.K. Eddie Ip

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 2
p. 113746

Abstract

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Summary: Lactic acid has emerged as an important modulator of immune cell function. It can be produced by both gut microbiota and the host metabolism at homeostasis and during disease states. The production of lactic acid in the gut microenvironment is vital for tissue homeostasis. In the present study, we examined how lactic acid integrates cellular metabolism to shape the epigenome of macrophages during pro-inflammatory response. We found that lactic acid serves as a primary fuel source to promote histone H3K27 acetylation, which allows the expression of immunosuppressive gene program including Nr4a1. Consequently, macrophage pro-inflammatory function was transcriptionally repressed. Furthermore, the histone acetylation induced by lactic acid promotes a form of long-term immunosuppression (“trained immunosuppression”). Pre-exposure to lactic acid induces lipopolysaccharide tolerance. These findings thus indicate that lactic acid sensing and its effect on chromatin remodeling in macrophages represent a key homeostatic mechanism that can provide a tolerogenic tissue microenvironment.

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