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IL-10 constrains sphingolipid metabolism to limit inflammation

Author

Listed:
  • Autumn G. York

    (Yale University
    Yale University
    University of Washington)

  • Mathias H. Skadow

    (Yale University)

  • Joonseok Oh

    (Yale University
    Yale University)

  • Rihao Qu

    (Yale University
    Yale University)

  • Quan D. Zhou

    (Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA)

  • Wei-Yuan Hsieh

    (Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA)

  • Walter K. Mowel

    (Yale University)

  • J. Richard Brewer

    (Yale University)

  • Eleanna Kaffe

    (Yale University)

  • Kevin J. Williams

    (David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA
    UCLA Lipidomics Laboratory)

  • Yuval Kluger

    (Yale University)

  • Stephen T. Smale

    (Yale University
    Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA)

  • Jason M. Crawford

    (Yale University
    Yale University
    Yale University School of Medicine)

  • Steven J. Bensinger

    (Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA
    UCLA Lipidomics Laboratory)

  • Richard A. Flavell

    (Yale University
    Yale University)

Abstract

Interleukin-10 (IL-10) is a key anti-inflammatory cytokine that can limit immune cell activation and cytokine production in innate immune cell types1. Loss of IL-10 signalling results in life-threatening inflammatory bowel disease in humans and mice—however, the exact mechanism by which IL-10 signalling subdues inflammation remains unclear2–5. Here we find that increased saturated very long chain (VLC) ceramides are critical for the heightened inflammatory gene expression that is a hallmark of IL-10 deficiency. Accordingly, genetic deletion of ceramide synthase 2 (encoded by Cers2), the enzyme responsible for VLC ceramide production, limited the exacerbated inflammatory gene expression programme associated with IL-10 deficiency both in vitro and in vivo. The accumulation of saturated VLC ceramides was regulated by a decrease in metabolic flux through the de novo mono-unsaturated fatty acid synthesis pathway. Restoring mono-unsaturated fatty acid availability to cells deficient in IL-10 signalling limited saturated VLC ceramide production and the associated inflammation. Mechanistically, we find that persistent inflammation mediated by VLC ceramides is largely dependent on sustained activity of REL, an immuno-modulatory transcription factor. Together, these data indicate that an IL-10-driven fatty acid desaturation programme rewires VLC ceramide accumulation and aberrant activation of REL. These studies support the idea that fatty acid homeostasis in innate immune cells serves as a key regulatory node to control pathologic inflammation and suggests that ‘metabolic correction’ of VLC homeostasis could be an important strategy to normalize dysregulated inflammation caused by the absence of IL-10.

Suggested Citation

  • Autumn G. York & Mathias H. Skadow & Joonseok Oh & Rihao Qu & Quan D. Zhou & Wei-Yuan Hsieh & Walter K. Mowel & J. Richard Brewer & Eleanna Kaffe & Kevin J. Williams & Yuval Kluger & Stephen T. Smale , 2024. "IL-10 constrains sphingolipid metabolism to limit inflammation," Nature, Nature, vol. 627(8004), pages 628-635, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:627:y:2024:i:8004:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07098-5
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07098-5
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