Pre-operative exercise therapy triggers anti-inflammatory trained immunity of Kupffer cells through metabolic reprogramming.
Hongji ZhangTianmeng ChenJinghua RenYujia XiaAmblessed OnumaYu WangJiayi HeJunru WuHan WangAhmad HamadChengli ShenJinxiang ZhangJohn M AsaraGregory K BehbehaniHaitao WenMeihong DengAllan TsungHai HuangPublished in: Nature metabolism (2021)
Pre-operative exercise therapy improves outcomes for many patients who undergo surgery. Despite the well-known effects on tolerance to systemic perturbation, the mechanisms by which pre-operative exercise protects the organ that is operated on from inflammatory injury are unclear. Here, we show that four-week aerobic pre-operative exercise significantly attenuates liver injury and inflammation from ischaemia and reperfusion in mice. Remarkably, these beneficial effects last for seven more days after completing pre-operative exercising. We find that exercise specifically drives Kupffer cells toward an anti-inflammatory phenotype with trained immunity via metabolic reprogramming. Mechanistically, exercise-induced HMGB1 release enhances itaconate metabolism in the tricarboxylic acid cycle that impacts Kupffer cells in an NRF2-dependent manner. Therefore, these metabolites and cellular/molecular targets can be investigated as potential exercise-mimicking pharmaceutical candidates to protect against liver injury during surgery.
Keyphrases
- liver injury
- high intensity
- drug induced
- resistance training
- induced apoptosis
- physical activity
- anti inflammatory
- cell cycle arrest
- oxidative stress
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery bypass
- clinical trial
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- ms ms
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- type diabetes
- high resolution
- adipose tissue
- mass spectrometry
- climate change
- insulin resistance
- study protocol
- brain injury
- smoking cessation
- double blind