How the metabolic demand of parasitism affects immune-mediated resistance is poorly understood. Immunity against parasitic helminths requires M2 cells and IL-13, secreted by CD4+ Th2 and group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2), but whether certain metabolic enzymes control disease outcome has not been addressed. This study demonstrates that AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key driver of cellular energy, regulates type 2 immunity and restricts lung injury following hookworm infection. Mice with a selective deficiency in the AMPK catalytic α1 subunit in alveolar macrophages and conventional dendritic cells produced less IL-13 and CCL17 and had impaired expansion of ILC2 in damaged lung tissue compared with wild-type controls. Defective type 2 responses were marked by increased intestinal worm burdens, exacerbated lung injury, and increased production of IL-12/23p40, which, when neutralized, restored IL-13 production and improved lung recovery. Taken together, these data indicate that defective AMPK activity in myeloid cells negatively impacts type 2 responses through increased IL-12/23p40 production. These data support an emerging concept that myeloid cells and ILC2 can coordinately regulate tissue damage at mucosal sites through mechanisms dependent on metabolic enzyme function.
CITATION STYLE
Nieves, W., Hung, L.-Y., Oniskey, T. K., Boon, L., Foretz, M., Viollet, B., & Herbert, D. R. (2016). Myeloid-Restricted AMPKα1 Promotes Host Immunity and Protects against IL-12/23p40–Dependent Lung Injury during Hookworm Infection. The Journal of Immunology, 196(11), 4632–4640. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1502218
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.