The deacetylation of Akt by SIRT1 inhibits inflammation in macrophages and protects against sepsis

Author:

Jia Yanhui1ORCID,Shen Kuo1,Liu Jiaqi1,Li Yan1,Bai Xiaozhi1,Yang Yunshu1,He Ting1,Zhang Yue1,Tong Lin1,Gao Xiaowen1,Zhang Zhi1,Guan Hao1,Hu Dahai1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Burns and Cutaneous Surgery, Xijing Hospital, Fourth Military Medical University, Xi’an 710032, China

Abstract

Sepsis is characterized by uncontrolled inflammatory response and altered polarization of macrophages at the early phase. Akt is known to drive macrophage inflammatory response. However, how macrophage inflammatory response is fine-tuned by Akt is poorly understood. Here, we found that Lys14 and Lys20 of Akt is deacetylated by the histone deacetylase SIRT1 during macrophage activation to suppress macrophages inflammatory response. Mechanistically, SIRT1 promotes Akt deacetylation to inhibit the activation of NF-κB and pro-inflammatory cytokines. Loss of SIRT1 facilitates Akt acetylation and thus promotes inflammatory cytokines in mouse macrophages, potentially worsen the progression of sepsis in mice. By contrast, the upregulation of SIRT1 in macrophages further contributes to the inhibition of pro-inflammatory cytokines via Akt activation in sepsis. Taken together, our findings establish Akt deacetylation as an essential negative regulatory mechanism that curtails M1 polarization.

Funder

Xijing Hospital Natural Science Funds for Distinguished Young Scientists

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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