Human iPSC-derived alveolar macrophages reveal macrophage subtype functions of itaconate in M. tuberculosis defense.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) survives within multiple macrophage populations during infection, including alveolar macrophages (AMs) and recruited inflammatory macrophages. In mice, itaconate, produced in macrophages by ACOD1-mediated decarboxylation of aconitate, has direct antimicrobial activity, modulates inflammatory cytokines, and is required for resistance to Mtb infection. The role of itaconate in human macrophages is less clear, and it is unknown whether itaconate mediates distinct effects in macrophage subtypes. Here, we investigated the role of itaconate in macrophages derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), induced by either GM-CSF to resemble AMs (AM-like cells, hereafter ipAM-Ls) or M-CSF to resemble monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM-like cells, hereafter ipMDM-Ls). Both human macrophage types produced substantially less itaconate than mouse macrophages, and ipAM-Ls produced 4-fold less itaconate than ipMDM-Ls. Surprisingly, ACOD1-deficient ipAM-Ls, but not ipMDM-Ls, were permissive for Mtb growth. Moreover, itaconate functioned to dampen the Mtb-induced inflammatory response in ipMDM-Ls, but not ipAM-Ls, affecting both the type I IFN and TNF pathways. These results indicate that itaconate is involved in human macrophage responses to tuberculosis, with distinct roles in different macrophage subsets. These results also show that genetically tractable iPSC-derived macrophages are a useful model to dissect cellular host-pathogen interactions in human macrophages.