Publication: Dietary Intake Regulates the Circulating Inflammatory Monocyte Pool.
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Cell Press
Abstract
Caloric restriction is known to improve inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. However, the mechanisms by which reduced caloric intake modulates inflammation are poorly understood. Here we show that short-term fasting reduced monocyte metabolic and inflammatory activity and drastically reduced the number of circulating monocytes. Regulation of peripheral monocyte numbers was dependent on dietary glucose and protein levels. Specifically, we found that activation of the low-energy sensor 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in hepatocytes and suppression of systemic CCL2 production by peroxisome proliferator-activator receptor alpha (PPARα) reduced monocyte mobilization from the bone marrow. Importantly, we show that fasting improves chronic inflammatory diseases without compromising monocyte emergency mobilization during acute infectious inflammation and tissue repair. These results reveal that caloric intake and liver energy sensors dictate the blood and tissue immune tone and link dietary habits to inflammatory disease outcome.
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We thank J. Agudo, S. Offermanns, C. Buettner, S. Fried, T. E. McGraw, A. W. Ferrante and the Merad laboratory for helpful discussions. We thank J. LeBerichel for technical assistance, A. Lansky for submission of the IRB application, the Flow Cytometry facility for technical support, the Human immune monitoring core for assistance with the multiplex assay, M. Davila for processing CyTOF data, M. Serasinghe for help with metabolic measurements in monocytes, the Stable Isotope & Metabolomics core at Albert Einstein College of Medicine for assistance with blood metabolite measurements, S. Hatem for assistance with phlebotomy and all participants of the human fasting experiment. We are grateful to Y. Belkaid for giving us the opportunity to use her laboratory at NIH and N. Bouladoux for assistance. We thank Wiegand von Hartmann GBR for designing the graphical abstract. Supported by the NIH (R01 CA154947, U24 AI118644, U19 AI128949 to M. M. and K08CA190770 to E.J.G),The Tisch Cancer Institute (Junior Scientist Award to E. J. G), and the German Research Council (DFG) (SFB-TRR57 P07 to M.-L. B, JO 1216/1-1 to S. J.).
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Cell . 2019 Aug 22;178(5):1102-1114.





