A suppressive oligodeoxynucleotide expressing TTAGGG motifs modulates cellular energetics through the mTOR signaling pathway
Author(s)
Date
2020Source Title
International Immunology
Print ISSN
0953-8178
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Volume
32
Issue
1
Pages
39 - 48
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
73
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Abstract
Immune-mediated inflammation must be down-regulated to facilitate tissue remodeling during
homeostatic restoration of an inflammatory response. Uncontrolled or over-exuberant immune
activation can cause autoimmune diseases, as well as tissue destruction. A151, the archetypal
example of a chemically synthesized suppressive oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) based on repetitive
telomere-derived TTAGGG sequences, was shown to successfully down-regulate a variety of immune
responses. However, the degree, duration and breadth of A151-induced transcriptome alterations
remain elusive. Here, we performed a comprehensive microarray analysis in combination with
Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) using murine splenocytes to investigate the underlying mechanism
of A151-dependent immune suppression. Our results revealed that A151 significantly down-regulates
critical mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) activators (Pi3kcd, Pdpk1 and Rheb), elements
downstream of mTOR signaling (Rps6ka1, Myc, Stat3 and Slc2a1), an important component of the
mTORC2 protein complex (Rictor) and Mtor itself. The effects of A151 on mTOR signaling were doseand time-dependent. Moreover, flow cytometry and immunoblotting analyses demonstrated that A151
is able to reverse mTOR phosphorylation comparably to the well-known mTOR inhibitor rapamycin.
Furthermore, Seahorse metabolic assays showed an A151 ODN-induced decrease in both oxygen
consumption and glycolysis implying that a metabolically inert state in macrophages could be
triggered by A151 treatment. Overall, our findings suggested novel insights into the mechanism by
which the immune system is metabolically modulated by A151 ODN.