AMPK/SIRT1 Deficiency Drives Adjuvant-Induced Arthritis in Rats by Promoting Glycolysis-Mediated Monocytes Inflammatory Polarization

J Inflamm Res. 2022 Aug 15:15:4663-4675. doi: 10.2147/JIR.S378090. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Background: Exact roles of many metabolic regulators in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are to be clarified. This study aimed to further characterize the impacts of silent information regulator 1 (SIRT1) status changes on this disease.

Methods: Fluctuation pattern of SIRT1 expression in adjuvant-induced arthritis (AIA) rats was monitored using periodically collected white blood cells. Another bath of AIA rats were treated by SIRT1 agonist resveratrol. Blood from these rats was used to separate monocytes and plasma, which were subjected to polymerase chain reaction (PCR), enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and biochemical analyses. Clinical implication of SIRT1 activation was verified by treating AIA rat monocytes with SIRT1 agonist and overexpression vector in vitro.

Results: SIRT1 deficiency occurred in AIA rats, which was accompanied with down-regulation of interleukin 10 (IL-10) and arginase-1 (ARG-1). Resveratrol eased oxidative stress and increased IL-10 production in vivo. Results of ELISA analysis demonstrated that resveratrol attenuated AIA severity in rats. Furthermore, it restored the altered levels of triglyceride, lactate and pyruvate in blood. Resveratrol promoted IL-10 production, and suppressed glycolysis of AIA monocytes cultured in vitro. SIRT1 overexpression similarly reshaped differentiation profile of AIA monocytes, evidenced by changes in metabolism indicators, IL-10 production and AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) pathway status. Although overexpressing SIRT1 in normal cells did not affect glycolysis significantly, it attenuated AMPK antagonist-caused abnormality.

Conclusion: SIRT1 deficiency is implicated in AIA-related immune abnormality and metabolism alteration. Activating this signaling with resveratrol would impair the inflammatory polarization of monocytes, and consequently ease the severity of RA.

Keywords: inflammation; metabolic reprogramming; monocytes; resveratrol; rheumatoid arthritis.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (81973828), The Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Anti-Inflammatory and Immune Medicine, Ministry of Education, P.R. China (Anhui Medical University) (KFJJ-2020-08), Anhui Natural Science Foundation Project (2108085QH386) and The Scientific Research Project of Health Commission of Anhui Province (AHWJ2021b061).