Cell Reports (Oct 2016)

Mitochondrial Dysfunction Prevents Repolarization of Inflammatory Macrophages

  • Jan Van den Bossche,
  • Jeroen Baardman,
  • Natasja A. Otto,
  • Saskia van der Velden,
  • Annette E. Neele,
  • Susan M. van den Berg,
  • Rosario Luque-Martin,
  • Hung-Jen Chen,
  • Marieke C.S. Boshuizen,
  • Mohamed Ahmed,
  • Marten A. Hoeksema,
  • Alex F. de Vos,
  • Menno P.J. de Winther

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.09.008
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
pp. 684 – 696

Abstract

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Macrophages are innate immune cells that adopt diverse activation states in response to their microenvironment. Editing macrophage activation to dampen inflammatory diseases by promoting the repolarization of inflammatory (M1) macrophages to anti-inflammatory (M2) macrophages is of high interest. Here, we find that mouse and human M1 macrophages fail to convert into M2 cells upon IL-4 exposure in vitro and in vivo. In sharp contrast, M2 macrophages are more plastic and readily repolarized into an inflammatory M1 state. We identify M1-associated inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation as the factor responsible for preventing M1→M2 repolarization. Inhibiting nitric oxide production, a key effector molecule in M1 cells, dampens the decline in mitochondrial function to improve metabolic and phenotypic reprogramming to M2 macrophages. Thus, inflammatory macrophage activation blunts oxidative phosphorylation, thereby preventing repolarization. Therapeutically restoring mitochondrial function might be useful to improve the reprogramming of inflammatory macrophages into anti-inflammatory cells to control disease.

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