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Altered hepatic metabolic landscape and insulin sensitivity in response to pulmonary tuberculosis

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posted on 2024-10-15, 08:33 authored by Mrinal K Das, Ben Savidge, John E Pearl, Thomas Yates, Gareth Miles, Manish Pareek, Pranabashis Haldar, Andrea CooperAndrea Cooper
Chronic inflammation triggers development of metabolic disease, and pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) generates chronic systemic inflammation. Whether TB induced-inflammation impacts metabolic organs and leads to metabolic disorder is ill defined. The liver is the master regulator of metabolism and to determine the impact of pulmonary TB on this organ we undertook an unbiased mRNA and protein analyses of the liver in mice with TB and reanalysed published data on human disease. Pulmonary TB led to upregulation of genes in the liver related to immune signalling and downregulation of genes encoding metabolic processes. In liver, IFN signalling pathway genes were upregulated and this was reflected in increased biochemical evidence of IFN signalling, including nuclear location of phosphorylated Stat-1 in hepatocytes. The liver also exhibited reduced expression of genes encoding the gluconeogenesis rate-limiting enzymes Pck1 and G6pc. Phosphorylation of CREB, a transcription factor controlling gluconeogenesis was drastically reduced in the livers of mice with pulmonary TB as was phosphorylation of other glucose metabolism-related kinases, including GSK3a, AMPK, and p42. In support of the upregulated IFN signalling being linked to the downregulated metabolic functions in the liver, we found suppression of gluconeogenic gene expression and reduced CREB phosphorylation in hepatocyte cell lines treated with interferons. The impact of reduced gluconeogenic gene expression in the liver was seen when infected mice were less able to convert pyruvate, a gluconeogenesis substrate, to the same extent as uninfected mice. Infected mice also showed evidence of reduced systemic and hepatic insulin sensitivity. Similarly, in humans with TB, we found that changes in a metabolite-based signature of insulin resistance correlates temporally with successful treatment of active TB and with progression to active TB following exposure. These data support the hypothesis that TB drives interferon-mediated alteration of hepatic metabolism resulting in reduced gluconeogenesis and drives systemic reduction of insulin sensitivity.

Funding

Royal Society-SERB Newton International Fellowship – Royal Society (NF160754)

Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund to the University of Leicester (WT 204801/Z/16/Z)

Driving innovation in precision medicine through translational life sciences research at the University of Leicester

UK Research and Innovation

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BBSRC Pathfinder IAA University of Leicester

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

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University of Leicester Microbial Sciences and Infectious Disease Centre pump priming grant (M00DF48)

T cells in tuberculosis: What type of T cell mediates immunity and how do we induce it by vaccination?

Medical Research Council

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Royal Society (grant number WM150032)

Improving understanding of lung immunity in tuberculosis to establish a diverse, innovative TB vaccine pipeline targeting mucosal immunity

European Commission

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Improving understanding of lung immunity in tuberculosis to establish a diverse, innovative TB vaccine pipeline targeting mucosal immunity

UK Research and Innovation

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History

Citation

Das MK, Savidge B, Pearl JE, Yates T, Miles G, Pareek M, et al. (2024) Altered hepatic metabolic landscape and insulin sensitivity in response to pulmonary tuberculosis. PLoS Pathog 20(9): e1012565. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012565

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Genetics, Genome Biology & Cancer Sciences/Population Health Sciences/Respiratory Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

PLOS Pathogens

Volume

20

Issue

9

Pagination

e1012565 - e1012565

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

issn

1553-7366

eissn

1553-7374

Acceptance date

2024-08-26

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-10-15

Editors

Lewinsohn DM

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Gareth Miles

Deposit date

2024-10-11

Data Access Statement

The transcriptomic data is available in the GEO Database with accession number GSE273691. The proteomic data is available in the Proteome Exchange Database with accession number PXD055781. The supporting data values for figures and tables are available at University of Leicester Figshare https://doi.org/10.25392/leicester.data.27051700.

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

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