JCI Insight (Sep 2020)

Epigenetic regulation of the PGE2 pathway modulates macrophage phenotype in normal and pathologic wound repair

  • Frank M. Davis,
  • Lam C. Tsoi,
  • Rachael Wasikowski,
  • Aaron denDekker,
  • Amrita Joshi,
  • Carol Wilke,
  • Hongping Deng,
  • Sonya Wolf,
  • Andrea Obi,
  • Steven Huang,
  • Allison C. Billi,
  • Scott Robinson,
  • Jay Lipinski,
  • William J. Melvin,
  • Christopher O. Audu,
  • Stephan Weidinger,
  • Steven L. Kunkel,
  • Andrew Smith,
  • Johann E. Gudjonsson,
  • Bethany B. Moore,
  • Katherine A. Gallagher

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 17

Abstract

Read online

Macrophages are a primary immune cell involved in inflammation, and their cell plasticity allows for transition from an inflammatory to a reparative phenotype and is critical for normal tissue repair following injury. Evidence suggests that epigenetic alterations play a critical role in establishing macrophage phenotype and function during normal and pathologic wound repair. Here, we find in human and murine wound macrophages that cyclooxygenase 2/prostaglandin E2 (COX-2/PGE2) is elevated in diabetes and regulates downstream macrophage-mediated inflammation and host defense. Using single-cell RNA sequencing of human wound tissue, we identify increased NF-κB–mediated inflammation in diabetic wounds and show increased COX-2/PGE2 in diabetic macrophages. Further, we identify that COX-2/PGE2 production in wound macrophages requires epigenetic regulation of 2 key enzymes in the cytosolic phospholipase A2/COX-2/PGE2 (cPLA2/COX-2/PGE2) pathway. We demonstrate that TGF-β–induced miRNA29b increases COX-2/PGE2 production via inhibition of DNA methyltransferase 3b–mediated hypermethylation of the Cox-2 promoter. Further, we find mixed-lineage leukemia 1 (MLL1) upregulates cPLA2 expression and drives COX-2/PGE2. Inhibition of the COX-2/PGE2 pathway genetically (Cox2fl/fl Lyz2Cre+) or with a macrophage-specific nanotherapy targeting COX-2 in tissue macrophages reverses the inflammatory macrophage phenotype and improves diabetic tissue repair. Our results indicate the epigenetically regulated PGE2 pathway controls wound macrophage function, and cell-targeted manipulation of this pathway is feasible to improve diabetic wound repair.

Keywords