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Ex Vivo 13 C-Metabolic Flux Analysis of Porcine Circulating Immune Cells Reveals Cell Type-Specific Metabolic Patterns and Sex Differences in the Pentose Phosphate Pathway.

Melanie HoggEva-Maria WolfschmittUlrich WachterFabian ZinkPeter RadermacherJosef Albert Vogt
Published in: Biomolecules (2024)
In general, females present with stronger immune responses than males, but scarce data are available on sex-specific differences in immunometabolism. In this study, we characterized porcine peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) and granulocyte energy metabolism using a Bayesian 13 C-metabolic flux analysis, which allowed precise determination of the glycolytic, pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), and tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) fluxes, together with an assessment of the superoxide anion radical (O 2 •- ) production and mitochondrial O 2 consumption. A principal component analysis allowed for identifying the cell type-specific patterns of metabolic plasticity. PBMCs displayed higher TCA cycle activity, especially glutamine-derived aspartate biosynthesis, which was directly related to mitochondrial respiratory activity and inversely related to O 2 •- production. In contrast, the granulocytes mainly utilized glucose via glycolysis, which was coupled to oxidative PPP utilization and O 2 •- production rates. The granulocytes of the males had higher oxidative PPP fluxes compared to the females, while the PBMCs of the females displayed higher non-oxidative PPP fluxes compared to the males associated with the T helper cell (CD3 + CD4 + ) subpopulation of PBMCs. The observed sex-specific differences were not directly attributable to sex steroid plasma levels, but we detected an inverse correlation between testosterone and aldosterone plasma levels and showed that aldosterone levels were related with non-oxidative PPP fluxes of both cell types.
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