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  4. Inhibition of mitophagy drives macrophage activation and antibacterial defense during sepsis
 
research article

Inhibition of mitophagy drives macrophage activation and antibacterial defense during sepsis

Patoli, Danish
•
Mignotte, Franck
•
Deckert, Valerie
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November 2, 2020
The Journal of clinical investigation

Mitochondria have emerged as key actors of innate and adaptive immunity. Mitophagy has a pivotal role in cell homeostasis, but its contribution to macrophage functions and host defense remains to be delineated. Here, we showed that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in combination with IFN-gamma inhibited PINK1-dependent mitophagy in macrophages through a STAT1-dependent activation of the inflammatory caspases 1 and 11. In addition, we demonstrated that the inhibition of mitophagy triggered classical macrophage activation in a mitochondrial ROS-dependent manner. In a murine model of polymicrobial infection (cecal ligature and puncture), adoptive transfer of Pink1-deficient bone marrow or pharmacological inhibition of mitophagy promoted macrophage activation, which favored bactericidal clearance and led to a better survival rate. Reciprocally, mitochondrial uncouplers that promote mitophagy reversed LPS/IFN-gamma-mediated activation of macrophages and led to immunoparalysis with impaired bacterial clearance and lowered survival. In critically ill patients, we showed that mitophagy was inhibited in blood monocytes of patients with sepsis as compared with nonseptic patients. Overall, this work demonstrates that the inhibition of mitophagy is a physiological mechanism that contributes to the activation of myeloid cells and improves the outcome of sepsis.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1172/JCI130996
Web of Science ID

WOS:000587413700026

Author(s)
Patoli, Danish
Mignotte, Franck
Deckert, Valerie
Dusuel, Alois
Dumont, Adelie
Rieu, Aurelie
Jalil, Antoine
Van Dongen, Kevin
Bourgeois, Thibaut
Gautier, Thomas
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Date Issued

2020-11-02

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC

Published in
The Journal of clinical investigation
Volume

130

Issue

11

Start page

5858

End page

5874

Subjects

Medicine, Research & Experimental

•

Research & Experimental Medicine

•

mitochondrial respiratory-chain

•

inflammasome activation

•

autophagy

•

innate

•

parkin

•

pink1

•

mechanism

•

ubiquitin

•

hypoxia

•

pathway

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LISP  
Available on Infoscience
November 24, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/173602
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