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Exercise activates interferon response of the liver via Gpld1 to enhance antiviral innate immunity.

Tengfei RenJiuyi HeTingting ZhangAnxing NiuYukang YuanYibo ZuoYing MiaoHongguang ZhangLichao ZangCaixia QiaoXinhua CaoXinyu YangZhijin ZhengYang XuDepei WuHui Zheng
Published in: Science advances (2024)
Healthy behavioral patterns could modulate organ functions to enhance the body's immunity. However, how exercise regulates antiviral innate immunity remains elusive. Here, we found that exercise promotes type I interferon (IFN-I) production in the liver and enhances IFN-I immune activity of the body. Despite the possibility that many exercise-induced factors could affect IFN-I production, we identified Gpld1 as a crucial molecule, and the liver as the major organ to promote IFN-I production after exercise. Exercise largely loses the efficiency to induce IFN-I in Gpld1 -/- mice. Further studies demonstrated that exercise-produced 3-hydroxybutanoic acid (3-HB) critically induces Gpld1 expression in the liver. Gpld1 blocks the PP2A-IRF3 interaction, thus enhancing IRF3 activation and IFN-I production, and eventually improving the body's antiviral ability. This study reveals that exercise improves antiviral innate immunity by linking the liver metabolism to systemic IFN-I activity and uncovers an unknown function of liver cells in innate immunity.
Keyphrases
  • dendritic cells
  • high intensity
  • immune response
  • physical activity
  • resistance training
  • cell death
  • body composition
  • insulin resistance
  • binding protein
  • wild type