Key Points
Hyperglycemia promotes trained immunity of monocytes/macrophages.
MLL mediates hyperglycemia-induced trained immunity.
Abstract
It has been well established that the presence of diabetes is accompanied by a chronic inflammatory state promoting various diabetes-associated complications. One potential driver of this enhanced inflammatory state in patients with diabetes is hyperglycemia. Even after blood glucose control is achieved, diabetes-associated complications persist, suggesting the presence of a “hyperglycemic memory.” Innate immune cells, critically involved in various complications associated with diabetes, can build nonspecific, immunological memory (trained immunity) via epigenetic regulation. We examine the potential involvement of hyperglycemia-induced trained immunity in promoting inflammation. Our results show that hyperglycemia induces a trained phenotype in vivo in mice and in vitro in human monocytes, representative by an increased TNF-α secretion after ex vivo stimulation with LPS. These effects were largely mediated by epigenetic changes controlled by the mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) family because treatment with the MLL inhibitor menin-MLL during the process of trained immunity acquisition repressed the proinflammatory phenotype. Collectively, our results identify a novel link between hyperglycemia and inflammation in innate immune cells that might explain the increased proinflammatory state during diabetes potentially contributing to the development of various diabetes-associated complications.
Footnotes
This work was supported by a European Research Council Consolidator Grant (310372) (to M.G.N.), the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (a Spinoza Grant to M.G.N. and Veni Grant 91616083 to J.v.D.). R.S. is supported by a senior fellowship from the Dutch Diabetes Research Foundation (2015.82.1824). This work was also supported by the Dutch Heart Foundation (IN-CONTROL).
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
- Received November 15, 2019.
- Accepted December 7, 2020.
- Copyright © 2021 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
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