Publication | Open Access
Bile acids target mitofusin 2 to differentially regulate innate immunity in physiological versus cholestatic conditions
53
Citations
18
References
2023
Year
Lipid PeroxidationInnate Immune SystemImmunologyCell DeathInnate ImmunityOxidative StressInflammationCell SignalingHealth SciencesBiochemistryBile Acids TargetLiver PhysiologyChronic InflammationMetabolomicsBile Acids FunctionCell BiologyBile AcidsMitochondrial FunctionBiliary TractPhysiologySystemic MetabolitesMedicine
Systemic metabolites serving as danger-associated molecular patterns play crucial roles in modulating the development, differentiation, and activity of innate immune cells. Yet, it is unclear how innate immune cells detect systemic metabolites for signal transmission. Here, we show that bile acids function as endogenous mitofusin 2 (MFN2) ligands and differentially modulate innate immune response to bacterial infection under cholestatic and physiological conditions. Bile acids at high concentrations promote mitochondrial tethering to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), leading to calcium overload in the mitochondrion, which activates NLRP3 inflammasome and pyroptosis. By contrast, at physiologically relevant low concentrations, bile acids promote mitochondrial fusion, leading to enhanced oxidative phosphorylation and thereby strengthening infiltrated macrophages mediated phagocytotic clearance of bacteria. These findings support that bile acids, as endogenous activators of MFN2, are vital for tuning innate immune responses against infections, representing a causal link that connects systemic metabolism with mitochondrial dynamics in shaping innate immunity.
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