Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Metabolic rewiring of macrophages by epidermal-derived lactate promotes sterile inflammation in the murine skin.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

April 1, 2024

Journal

The EMBO journal

Volume/Issue

43/7

ISSN

1460-2075

Dysregulated macrophage responses and changes in tissue metabolism are hallmarks of chronic inflammation in the skin. However, the metabolic cues that direct and support macrophage functions in the skin are poorly understood. Here, we show that during sterile skin inflammation, the epidermis and macrophages uniquely depend on glycolysis and the TCA cycle, respectively. This compartmentalisation is initiated by ROS-induced HIF-1α stabilization leading to enhanced glycolysis in the epidermis. The end-product of glycolysis, lactate, is then exported by epithelial cells and utilized by the dermal macrophages to induce their M2-like fates through NF-κB pathway activation. In addition, we show that psoriatic skin disorder is also driven by such lactate metabolite-mediated crosstalk between the epidermis and macrophages. Notably, small-molecule inhibitors of lactate transport in this setting attenuate sterile inflammation and psoriasis disease burden, and suppress M2-like fate acquisition in dermal macrophages. Our study identifies an essential role for the metabolite lactate in regulating macrophage responses to inflammation, which may be effectively targeted to treat inflammatory skin disorders such as psoriasis.

Alternate Journal

EMBO J

PubMed ID

38418556

PubMed Central ID

PMC10987662

Authors

Uttkarsh Ayyangar
Aneesh Karkhanis
Heather Tay
Aliya Farissa Binte Afandi
Oindrila Bhattacharjee
Lalitha Ks
Sze Han Lee
James Chan
Srikala Raghavan

Keywords

Psoriasis
Animals
Mice
Inflammation
Skin
Lactic Acid
Macrophages