Systemic inflammation impairs myelopoiesis and interferon type I responses in humans
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2025
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Systemic inflammatory conditions are classically characterized by an acute hyperinflammatory phase, followed by a late immunosuppressive phase that elevates the susceptibility to secondary infections. Comprehensive mechanistic understanding of these phases is largely lacking. To address this gap, we leveraged a controlled, human in vivo model of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced systemic inflammation encompassing both phases. Single-cell RNA sequencing during the acute hyperinflammatory phase identified an inflammatory CD163+SLC39A8+CALR+ monocyte-like subset (infMono) at 4 h post-LPS administration. The late immunosuppressive phase was characterized by diminished expression of type I interferon (IFN)-responsive genes in monocytes, impaired myelopoiesis and a pronounced attenuation of the immune response on a secondary LPS challenge 1 week after the first. The infMono gene program and impaired myelopoiesis were also detected in patient cohorts with bacterial sepsis and coronavirus disease. IFNβ treatment restored type-I IFN responses and proinflammatory cytokine production and induced monocyte maturation, suggesting a potential treatment option for immunosuppression.
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Keramati, F, Leijte, G P, Bruse, N, Grondman, I, Habibi, E, Ruiz-Moreno, C, Megchelenbrink, W, Peters van Ton, A M, Heesakkers, H, Bremmers, M E, van Grinsven, E, Tesselaar, K, van Staveren, S, van der Velden, W J, Preijers, F W, Te Pas, B, van de Loop, R, Gerretsen, J, Netea, M G, Stunnenberg, H G, Pickkers, P & Kox, M 2025, 'Systemic inflammation impairs myelopoiesis and interferon type I responses in humans', Nature immunology, vol. 26, no. 5, e1001304, pp. 737–747. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-025-02136-4