American Diabetes Association
Browse

Padi4-dependent NETosis enables diet-induced gut hyperpermeability, translating dysbiosis into systemic inflammation and dysmetabolism

Download (4.69 MB)
figure
posted on 2025-02-13, 16:07 authored by Mattia Albiero, Ludovica Migliozzi, Carlotta Boscaro, Anna Rodella, Stefano Ciciliot, Francesco Ivan Amendolagine, Valentina Scattolini, Laura Treu, Roberta Cappellari, Paola Lanuti, Annica Barizza, Gaia Codolo, Alessandra Giannella, Giulio Ceolotto, Tatiana Varanita, Luca Prevedello, Mirto Foletto, Sara Bogialli, Stefano Campanaro, Angelo Avogaro, Gian Paolo Fadini

Microbial signals trigger the release of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) through peptidyl-arginine-deiminase-4 (PADI4). In turn, NETosis can propagate inflammation to distant tissues. We hypothesize that PADI4 mediates the interactions between diet-modified microbiota and host metabolism. We report that in the adipose tissue of individuals with obesity, NETosis was associated with dysglycemia. In mice, high-fat diet (HFD) induced not only dysmetabolism and meta-inflammation but also local and systemic signs of NETosis. Deleting Padi4 in hematopoietic cells (Padi4KO) blunted liver and adipose inflammation and improved metabolism under HFD. While NETs were able to disrupt gut epithelial integrity, abrogating NETosis preserved intestinal barrier function and mitigated metabolic endotoxemia due to HFD. Padi4 deletion did not prevent diet-induced dysbiosis, but Padi4KO mice were protected from intestinal hyper-permeability and metabolic impairment due to the transfer of HFD-modified microbiota. As Padi4KO did not blunt the dysmetabolic effects of LPS, we conclude that NETosis operates at the microbiota-intestinal interface, inducing hyperpermeability and the systemic spillover of bacterial-derived products, paving the way to the metabolic consequences of HFD. Finally, pharmacologic PADI4 inhibition recapitulated findings obtained in Padi4KO mice on metabolism and liver steatosis, thereby uncovering a druggable role for PADI4 in mediating the metabolic effects of unhealthy microbiota.

Funding

This study was supported from the University of Padova (2017 STARS project “DiaNEtes” to G.P.F, 2021 STARS@UNIPD Finanziato dall’Unione Europea NextGenerationEU, “MalTraDiates” to M.A.; DOR project), the Ministry of University and Research (PRIN 2015ZTT5KB and 201793XZ5A), and the European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes (EFSD / Lilly Research Fellowship 2016).

History

Usage metrics

    Diabetes

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC