TB Research

Immunoregulatory macrophages induced by mycobacterial nonpolar lipids

Jéssica Dias Petrilli, Paulo Estevão, Luana Evangelista De Araújo, Igor Müller, Marcos Y. Yoshinaga, Pablo Ivan Pereira Ramos, Adriano B. Chaves‐Filho, Thainá Horta, et al. (13 authors)

The Journal of Immunology · 2025-04

Abstract

The capacity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) to establish long-term survival is attributed to its ability to subvert host defense mechanisms, especially macrophages. Although Mtb lipids are believed to play a role in this host-pathogen crosstalk, how mycobacterial lipids drive this complex interaction is poorly characterized. Here, we cultured macrophages with nonpolar cell wall Mtb lipids and applied high-throughput expression profiling (RNA sequencing), mass spectrometry-based targeted eicosanoid, and untargeted lipidomics analysis. This system-level analysis revealed that Mtb nonpolar lipid triggered the expression of phenotypic markers for classically and alternatively activated macrophages, a state previously referred as immunoregulatory. Specifically, under lipid stimulation, macrophages expressed high levels of proinflammatory markers, activated components of the interleukin-1 family, underwent an imbalance in lipid metabolism, and shifted the eicosanoid synthesis pathway toward the prostaglandin axis. Taken together, these results suggest an intricate mechanism of Mtb-driven macrophage immunomodulation that may favor its long-term survival.

MeSH terms

  • Lipidomics
  • Cell biology
  • Biology
  • Eicosanoid metabolism
  • Eicosanoid
  • Lipid metabolism
  • Transcriptome
  • Crosstalk
  • Proinflammatory cytokine
  • Phenotype
  • Lipidome
  • Macrophage
  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Lipid signaling
  • Inflammation
  • Microbiology