La Trobe

NCX1 represents an ionic Na<sup>+</sup> sensing mechanism in macrophages

journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-20, 05:28 authored by Patrick Neubert, A Homann, D Wendelborn, AL Bär, L Krampert, M Trum, A Schröder, S Ebner, A Weichselbaum, V Schatz, P Linz, R Veelken, J Schulte-Schrepping, AC Aschenbrenner, T Quast, C Kurts, S Geisberger, K Kunzelmann, K Hammer, Katrina BingerKatrina Binger, J Titze, DN Müller, W Kolanus, JL Schultze, S Wagner, J Jantsch
<p dir="ltr">Inflammation and infection can trigger local tissue Na<sup>+</sup> accumulation. This Na<sup>+</sup>-rich environment boosts proinflammatory activation of monocyte/macrophage-like cells (MΦs) and their antimicrobial activity. Enhanced Na<sup>+</sup>-driven MΦ function requires the osmoprotective transcription factor nuclear factor of activated T cells 5 (NFAT5), which augments nitric oxide (NO) production and contributes to increased autophagy. However, the mechanism of Na<sup>+</sup> sensing in MΦs remained unclear. High extracellular Na<sup>+</sup> levels (high salt [HS]) trigger a substantial Na<sup>+</sup> influx and Ca<sup>2+</sup> loss. Here, we show that the Na<sup>+</sup>/Ca<sup>2+</sup> exchanger 1 (NCX1, also known as solute carrier family 8 member A1 [SLC8A1]) plays a critical role in HS-triggered Na<sup>+</sup> influx, concomitant Ca<sup>2+</sup> efflux, and subsequent augmented NFAT5 accumulation. Moreover, interfering with NCX1 activity impairs HS-boosted inflammatory signaling, infection-triggered autolysosome formation, and subsequent antibacterial activity. Taken together, this demonstrates that NCX1 is able to sense Na<sup>+</sup> and is required for amplifying inflammatory and antimicrobial MΦ responses upon HS exposure. Manipulating NCX1 offers a new strategy to regulate MΦ function.</p>

History

Publication Date

2020-06-22

Journal

PLoS Biology

Volume

18

Issue

6

Article Number

e3000722

Pagination

21p.

Publisher

Public Library of Science

ISSN

1544-9173

Rights Statement

© 2020 Neubert et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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