High Glucose and Carbonyl Stress Impair HIF-1-Regulated Responses and the Control of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in Macrophages
Graciela Terán, Han‐Xiong Li, Sergiu‐Bogdan Catrina, Ruining Liu, Susanna Brighenti, Xiaowei Zheng, Jakob Grünler, Susanne Nylén, et al. (10 authors)
mBio · 2022-09
Abstract
People living with diabetes who are also infected with M. tuberculosis are more likely to develop tuberculosis disease (TB). Why diabetic patients have an increased risk for developing TB is not well understood. Macrophages, the cell niche for M. tuberculosis, can express microbicidal mechanisms or be permissive to mycobacterial persistence and growth. Here, we showed that high glucose and carbonyl stress, which mediate diabetes pathogenesis, impair the control of intracellular M. tuberculosis in macrophages. Infection with M. tuberculosis stimulated the expression of genes regulated by the transcription factor HIF-1, a major controller of the responses to hypoxia, resulting in macrophage activation. High glucose and carbonyl compounds inhibited HIF-1 responses by macrophages. Mycobacterial control in the presence of glucose or carbonyl stress was restored by DFO, a compound that stabilizes HIF-1. We propose that HIF-1 can be targeted to reduce the risk of developing TB in people with diabetes.
MeSH terms
- Tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Diabetes mellitus
- Medicine
- Disease
- Immunology
- Microbiology
- Virology