Publication date: 11 April 2017
Source:Cell Reports, Volume 19, Issue 2
Author(s): Olga Spadaro, Christina D. Camell, Lidia Bosurgi, Kim Y. Nguyen, Yun-Hee Youm, Carla V. Rothlin, Vishwa Deep Dixit
In concert with their phagocytic activity, macrophages are thought to regulate the host immunometabolic responses primarily via their ability to produce specific cytokines and metabolites. Here, we show that IL-4-differentiated, M2-like macrophages secrete IGF1, a hormone previously thought to be exclusively produced from liver. Ablation of IGF1 receptors from myeloid cells reduced phagocytosis, increased macrophages in adipose tissue, elevated adiposity, lowered energy expenditure, and led to insulin resistance in mice fed a high-fat diet. The investigation of adipose macrophage phenotype in obese myeloid IGF1R knockout (MIKO) mice revealed a reduction in transcripts associated with M2-like macrophage activation. Furthermore, the MIKO mice infected with helminth Nippostrongylus brasiliensis displayed delayed resolution from infection with normal insulin sensitivity. Surprisingly, cold challenge did not trigger an overt M2-like state and failed to induce tyrosine hydroxylase expression in adipose tissue macrophages of control or MIKO mice. These results show that IGF1 signaling shapes the macrophage-activation phenotype.
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Teaser
Endocrine IGF1 plays pleiotropic functions and provides signals to macrophages to sustain tissue development and homeostasis. In this work, Spadaro et al. show that M2-like macrophages are an important source of IGF1 itself and that the myeloid-derived IGF1R signaling regulates immune metabolism. Host adaptation to high-fat-diet-induced obesity and helminth clearance requires myeloid IGF1R, but not the response to cold-stress.http://ift.tt/2o64WDu
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