Background: Myeloid cell metabolic reprogramming is a hallmark of inflammatory disease; however, its role in inflammation-induced hypercoagulability is poorly understood.
Objectives: We aimed to evaluate the role of inflammation-associated metabolic reprogramming in regulating blood coagulation.
Methods: We used novel myeloid cell-based global hemostasis assays and murine models of immunometabolic disease.
Results: Glycolysis was essential for enhanced activated myeloid cell tissue factor expression and decryption, driving increased cell-dependent thrombin generation in response to inflammatory challenge. Similarly, inhibition of glycolysis enhanced activated macrophage fibrinolytic activity through reduced plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 activity. Macrophage polarization or activation markedly increased endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) expression on monocytes and macrophages, leading to increased myeloid cell-dependent protein C activation. Importantly, inflammation-dependent EPCR expression on tissue-resident macrophages was also observed in vivo. Adipose tissue macrophages from obese mice fed a high-fat diet exhibited significantly enhanced EPCR expression and activated protein C generation compared with macrophages isolated from the adipose tissue of healthy mice. Similarly, the induction of colitis in mice prompted infiltration of EPCR+ innate myeloid cells within inflamed colonic tissue that were absent from the intestinal tissue of healthy mice.
Conclusion: Collectively, this study identifies immunometabolic regulation of myeloid cell hypercoagulability, opening new therapeutic possibilities for targeted mitigation of thromboinflammatory disease.
Keywords: coagulation; fibrinolysis; inflammation; macrophages; protein C.
Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.