Tissue-infiltrating macrophages mediate an exosome-based metabolic reprogramming upon DNA damage

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Abstract

DNA damage and metabolic disorders are intimately linked with premature disease onset but the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we show that persistent DNA damage accumulation in tissue-infiltrating macrophages carrying an ERCC1-XPF DNA repair defect (Er1F/−) triggers Golgi dispersal, dilation of endoplasmic reticulum, autophagy and exosome biogenesis leading to the secretion of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in vivo and ex vivo. Macrophage-derived EVs accumulate in Er1F/− animal sera and are secreted in macrophage media after DNA damage. The Er1F/− EV cargo is taken up by recipient cells leading to an increase in insulin-independent glucose transporter levels, enhanced cellular glucose uptake, higher cellular oxygen consumption rate and greater tolerance to glucose challenge in mice. We find that high glucose in EV-targeted cells triggers pro-inflammatory stimuli via mTOR activation. This, in turn, establishes chronic inflammation and tissue pathology in mice with important ramifications for DNA repair-deficient, progeroid syndromes and aging.

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Goulielmaki, E., Ioannidou, A., Tsekrekou, M., Stratigi, K., Poutakidou, I. K., Gkirtzimanaki, K., … Garinis, G. A. (2020). Tissue-infiltrating macrophages mediate an exosome-based metabolic reprogramming upon DNA damage. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13894-9

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