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Deciphering cross-cohort metabolic signatures of immune responses and their implications for disease pathogenesis.

Molecular systems biology

Authors: Jianbo Fu, Nienke van Unen, Andrei Sarlea, Nhan Nguyen, Martin Jaeger, Javier Botey Bataller, Valerie A C M Koeken, L Charlotte de Bree, Vera P Mourits, Simone J C F M Moorlag, Godfrey Temba, Vesla I Kullaya, Quirijn de Mast, Leo A B Joosten, Cheng-Jian Xu, Mihai G Netea, Yang Li

The complex interplay between circulating metabolites and immune responses, which is pivotal to disease pathophysiology, remains poorly understood and understudied in systematic research. Here, we performed a comprehensive analysis of the immune response and circulating metabolome in two Western European cohorts (534 and 324 healthy individuals) and one from sub-Saharan Africa (323 healthy donors). At the metabolic level, our analysis revealed sex-specific differences in the correlation between phosphatidylcholine and cytokine responses following ex vivo stimulation. Notably, sphingomyelin exhibited a significant negative correlation with monocyte-derived cytokine production in response to Staphylococcus aureus stimulation, a finding that was validated through functional experiments. Subsequently, using Mendelian randomization analysis, we established a link between sphingomyelin and COVID-19 severity, providing compelling evidence for its modulatory role in immune responses during human infection. Collectively, our results represent a unique resource ( https://lab-li.ciim-hannover.de/apps/imetabomap/ ) for exploring metabolic signatures associated with immune function in different populations, highlighting sphingomyelin metabolism as a potential target in treating inflammatory and infectious diseases.

© 2025. The Author(s).

PMID: 40931194

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