AI Article Synopsis

  • Macrophages play a crucial role in managing heme metabolism and increase in number during the breakdown of damaged red blood cells (RBCs) in the liver, which is linked to their immune function.
  • The study reveals that an increase in RBC disposal by macrophages during a pulmonary infection with Klebsiella pneumoniae leads to an immunosuppressive state, resulting in increased bacterial growth outside the lungs and poorer survival rates in infected mice.
  • This immunosuppression is related to a decrease in the STAT1 pathway and interferon responses, primarily influenced by the porphyrin component of heme, rather than by the iron it contains, indicating a complex relationship between heme metabolism and immune response during severe infections.

Article Abstract

Macrophages are main effectors of heme metabolism, increasing transiently in the liver during heightened disposal of damaged or senescent RBCs (sRBCs). Macrophages are also essential in defense against microbial threats, but pathological states of heme excess may be immunosuppressive. Herein, we uncovered a mechanism whereby an acute rise in sRBC disposal by macrophages led to an immunosuppressive phenotype after intrapulmonary Klebsiella pneumoniae infection characterized by increased extrapulmonary bacterial proliferation and reduced survival from sepsis in mice. The impaired immunity to K. pneumoniae during heightened sRBC disposal was independent of iron acquisition by bacterial siderophores, in that K. pneumoniae mutants lacking siderophore function recapitulated the findings observed with the WT strain. Rather, sRBC disposal induced a liver transcriptomic profile notable for suppression of Stat1 and IFN-related responses during K. pneumoniae sepsis. Excess heme handling by macrophages recapitulated STAT1 suppression during infection that required synergistic NRF1 and NRF2 activation but was independent of heme oxygenase-1 induction. Whereas iron was dispensable, the porphyrin moiety of heme was sufficient to mediate suppression of STAT1-dependent responses in human and mouse macrophages and promoted liver dissemination of K. pneumoniae in vivo. Thus, cellular heme metabolism dysfunction negatively regulated the STAT1 pathway, with implications in severe infection.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7773401PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI137468DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Macrophages play a crucial role in managing heme metabolism and increase in number during the breakdown of damaged red blood cells (RBCs) in the liver, which is linked to their immune function.
  • The study reveals that an increase in RBC disposal by macrophages during a pulmonary infection with Klebsiella pneumoniae leads to an immunosuppressive state, resulting in increased bacterial growth outside the lungs and poorer survival rates in infected mice.
  • This immunosuppression is related to a decrease in the STAT1 pathway and interferon responses, primarily influenced by the porphyrin component of heme, rather than by the iron it contains, indicating a complex relationship between heme metabolism and immune response during severe infections.
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Pregnant mice were exposed to 150 micrograms benzo[a]pyrene (BaP) per gram of body weight during fetogenesis (d 11-17 of gestation) and the progeny were assayed for humoral and cell mediated immune responses at different time intervals after birth. Immature offspring (1-4 wk) were severely suppressed in their ability to produce antibody-(plaque-) forming cells (PFC) against sheep red blood cells (SRBC) and in the ability of their lymphocytes to undergo a mixed lymphocyte response (MLR). Lymphocytes from these progeny showed a moderate to weak capacity to inhabit production of colony-forming units (CFU) in host spleens following transfer with semiallogeneic bone marrow (BM) cells into lethally X-irradiated recipients syngeneic to the BM (in vivo graft-versus-host response, GVHR).

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