Key Points
PWD and 11.2 DCs have less NO production than B6 DCs.
PWD and 11.2 DCs maintain postactivation mitochondrial respiration.
NO levels between B6 and 11.2 DCs inversely correlate with L. monocytogenes control.
Abstract
Dendritic cell (DC) activation is characterized by sustained commitment to glycolysis that is a requirement for survival in DC subsets that express inducible NO synthase (Nos2) due to NO-mediated inhibition of mitochondrial respiration. This phenomenon primarily has been studied in DCs from the classic laboratory inbred mouse strain C57BL/6J (B6) mice, where DCs experience a loss of mitochondrial function due to NO accumulation. To assess the conservation of NO-driven metabolic regulation in DCs, we compared B6 mice to the wild-derived genetically divergent PWD/PhJ (PWD) strain. We show preserved mitochondrial respiration and enhanced postactivation survival due to attenuated NO production in LPS-stimulated PWD DCs phenocopying human monocyte-derived DCs. To genetically map this phenotype, we used a congenic mouse strain (B6.PWD-Chr11.2) that carries a PWD-derived portion of chromosome 11, including Nos2, on a B6 background. B6.PWD-Chr11.2 DCs show preserved mitochondrial function and produce lower NO levels than B6 DCs. We demonstrate that activated B6.PWD-Chr11.2 DCs maintain mitochondrial respiration and TCA cycle carbon flux, compared with B6 DCs. However, reduced NO production by the PWD Nos2 allele results in impaired cellular control of Listeria monocytogenes replication. These studies establish a natural genetic model for restrained endogenous NO production to investigate the contribution of NO in regulating the interplay between DC metabolism and immune function. These findings suggest that reported differences between human and murine DCs may be an artifact of the limited genetic diversity of the mouse models used, underscoring the need for mouse genetic diversity in immunology research.
Footnotes
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (P30GM118228, 1R21AI135385-01A, T32AI055402-15, and R21 AI145306), the NIH, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (R01 NS097596), and the National Multiple Sclerosis Society (RG-1901-33309).
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
Abbreviations used in this article
- 11.2
- B6.PWD-Chr11.2
- ATCC
- American Type Culture Collection
- B6
- C57BL/6J
- dbSNP
- single nucleotide polymorphism database
- DC
- dendritic cell
- F1-11.2
- 11.2.iNOS-KO.F1
- F1-B6
- B6.iNOS-KO.F1
- 1% FBS
- PBS containing 1% FBS
- iNOS
- inducible NO synthase
- iNOS-KO
- iNOS-deficient B6.129P2-Nos2tm1Lau/J
- L10
- 10 ng/ml LPS
- L100
- 100 ng/ml LPS
- moDC
- monocyte-derived DC
- MOI
- multiplicity of infection
- MS
- mass spectrometry
- OCR
- oxygen consumption rate
- PWD
- PWD/PhJ
- PWK
- PWK/PhJ
- RT-qPCR
- quantitative RT-PCR
- SEITU
- S-ethyl-isothiourea
- SNP
- single nucleotide polymorphism
- UHPLC
- ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography
- Received April 20, 2021.
- Accepted October 4, 2021.
- Copyright © 2021 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
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