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Soluble uric acid inhibits β2 integrin–mediated neutrophil recruitment in innate immunity

  • Qiuyue Ma
  • , Roland Immler
  • , Monika Pruenster
  • , Markus Sellmayr
  • , Chenyu Li
  • , Albrecht von Brunn
  • , Brigitte von Brunn
  • , Rosina Ehmann
  • , Roman Wölfel
  • , Matteo Napoli
  • , Qiubo Li
  • , Paola Romagnani
  • , Ralph Thomas Böttcher
  • , Markus Sperandio
  • , Hans Joachim Anders
  • , Stefanie Steiger*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
  • Bundeswehr Institute of Microbiology
  • University of Florence
  • Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Neutrophils are key players during host defense and sterile inflammation. Neutrophil dysfunction is a characteristic feature of the acquired immunodeficiency during kidney disease. We speculated that the impaired renal clearance of the intrinsic purine metabolite soluble uric acid (sUA) may account for neutrophil dysfunction. Indeed, hyperuricemia (HU, serum UA of 9-12 mg/dL) related or unrelated to kidney dysfunction significantly diminished neutrophil adhesion and extravasation in mice with crystal- and coronavirus-related sterile inflammation using intravital microscopy and an air pouch model. This impaired neutrophil recruitment was partially reversible by depleting UA with rasburicase. We validated these findings in vitro using either neutrophils or serum from patients with kidney dysfunction–related HU with or without UA depletion, which partially normalized the defective migration of neutrophils. Mechanistically, sUA impaired β2 integrin activity and internalization/recycling by regulating intracellular pH and cytoskeletal dynamics, physiological processes that are known to alter the migratory and phagocytic capability of neutrophils. This effect was fully reversible by blocking intracellular uptake of sUA via urate transporters. In contrast, sUA had no effect on neutrophil extracellular trap formation in neutrophils from healthy subjects or patients with kidney dysfunction. Our results identify an unexpected immunoregulatory role of the intrinsic purine metabolite sUA, which contrasts the well-known immunostimulatory effects of crystalline UA. Specifically targeting UA may help to overcome certain forms of immunodeficiency, for example in kidney dysfunction, but may enhance sterile forms of inflammation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3402-3417
Number of pages16
JournalBlood
Volume139
Issue number23
DOIs
StatePublished - 9 Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

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