Metabolic and Proteomic Divergence Is Present in Circulating Monocytes and Tissue-Resident Macrophages from Berkeley Sickle Cell Anemia and β-Thalassemia Mice.
Christina LiskFrancesca CendaliSaini SetuaKiruphararan ThangarajuDavid I PakDelaney SwindleMonika DzieciatkowskaFabia GamboniKathryn HassellRachelle NussGemlyn GeorgePavel Davizon-CastilloPaul W BuehlerAngelo D'AlessandroDavid C IrwinPublished in: Journal of proteome research (2023)
Sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia represent hemoglobinopathies arising from dysfunctional or underproduced β-globin chains, respectively. In both diseases, red blood cell injury and anemia are the impetus for end organ injury. Because persistent erythrophagocytosis is a hallmark of these genetic maladies, it is critical to understand how macrophage phenotype polarizations in tissue compartments can inform on disease progression. Murine models of sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia allow for a basic understanding of the mechanisms and provide for translation to human disease. A multi-omics approach to understanding the macrophage metabolism and protein changes in two murine models of β-globinopathy was performed on peripheral blood mononuclear cells as well as spleen and liver macrophages isolated from Berkley sickle cell disease (Berk-ss) and heterozygous B1/B2 globin gene deletion (Hbb th3/+ ) mice. The results from these experiments revealed that the metabolome and proteome of macrophages are polarized to a distinct phenotype in Berk-ss and Hbb th3/+ compared with each other and their common-background mice (C57BL6/J). Further, spleen and liver macrophages revealed distinct disease-specific phenotypes, suggesting that macrophages become differentially polarized and reprogrammed within tissue compartments. We conclude that tissue recruitment, polarization, and metabolic and proteomic reprogramming of macrophages in Berk-ss and Hbb th3/+ mice may be relevant to disease progression in other tissue.