[HTML][HTML] Activation of GPR37 in macrophages confers protection against infection-induced sepsis and pain-like behaviour in mice

S Bang, CR Donnelly, X Luo, M Toro-Moreno… - Nature …, 2021 - nature.com
Nature communications, 2021nature.com
GPR37 was discovered more than two decades ago, but its biological functions remain
poorly understood. Here we report a protective role of GPR37 in multiple models of infection
and sepsis. Mice lacking Gpr37 exhibited increased death and/or hypothermia following
challenge by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), Listeria bacteria, and the mouse malaria parasite
Plasmodium berghei. Sepsis induced by LPS and Listeria in wild-type mice is protected by
artesunate (ARU) and neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1), but the protective actions of these agents …
Abstract
GPR37 was discovered more than two decades ago, but its biological functions remain poorly understood. Here we report a protective role of GPR37 in multiple models of infection and sepsis. Mice lacking Gpr37 exhibited increased death and/or hypothermia following challenge by lipopolysaccharide (LPS), Listeria bacteria, and the mouse malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei. Sepsis induced by LPS and Listeria in wild-type mice is protected by artesunate (ARU) and neuroprotectin D1 (NPD1), but the protective actions of these agents are lost in Gpr37−/− mice. Notably, we found that ARU binds to GPR37 in macrophages and promotes phagocytosis and clearance of pathogens. Moreover, ablation of macrophages potentiated infection, sepsis, and their sequelae, whereas adoptive transfer of NPD1- or ARU-primed macrophages reduced infection, sepsis, and pain-like behaviors. Our findings reveal physiological actions of ARU in host cells by activating macrophages and suggest that GPR37 agonists may help to treat sepsis, bacterial infections, and malaria.
nature.com