Sepsis-induced lipid droplet accumulation enhances antibacterial innate immunity through mechanisms dependent on DGAT-1 and interferon-beta
- PMID: 40972976
- DOI: 10.1016/j.metabol.2025.156389
Sepsis-induced lipid droplet accumulation enhances antibacterial innate immunity through mechanisms dependent on DGAT-1 and interferon-beta
Abstract
Lipid droplets (LDs) are lipid-rich organelles recognized as central players in lipid homeostasis, signaling, and inflammation. While their functions in inflammation are well-documented, the mechanisms of LDs in antibacterial immunity and infection resistance remain less understood. Our results show that E. coli-infection trigger immunometabolic reprogramming and LD accumulation in murine macrophages (BMDM). Moreover, purified LDs from LPS-stimulated and E. coli-infected macrophages exhibited direct E. coli anti-bacterial activity. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic knockdown of DGAT1, a key enzyme in triglyceride synthesis, reduced LD formation, bacterial clearance, and pro-inflammatory responses (nitric oxide, PGE2, CCL2, IL-6). Notably, DGAT1 inhibition impaired the expression of IFN-β and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), including viperin, iNOS, cathelicidin and IGTP, in E. coli-infected macrophages. In a cecal-ligation and puncture model of sepsis in C57BL/6 mice, DGAT1 inhibition reduced sepsis-induced LD accumulation in peritoneal cells and decreased levels of IFN-β, CCL2, nitric oxide, and lipid mediators (PGE2, LTB4, and RvD1) in the peritoneum. Furthermore, DGAT1 inhibition accelerated sepsis-related mortality, coinciding with elevated bacterial loads in the peritoneum and bloodstream at 6- and 24-h post-sepsis. Our results demonstrate that LDs are critical regulators of innate immunity infection resistance, contributing to both bacterial clearance and the coordination of a protective proinflammatory response during sepsis through mechanisms dependent on DGAT-1 and Type I IFN.
Keywords: Immunometabolism; Lipid droplets; Lipid metabolism; Macrophages; Resistence to infection.
Copyright © 2025 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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