Aromatic Microbial Metabolite Hippuric Acid Potentiates Pro-Inflammatory Responses in Macrophages through TLR-MyD88 Signaling and Lipid Remodeling
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The gut microbiome generates a diverse array of metabolites that actively shape host immunity, yet the pro-inflammatory potential of microbial metabolites remains poorly understood. In this study, we identified hippuric acid, an aromatic gut microbe-derived metabolite, as a potent enhancer of pro-inflammatory responses using a murine bacterial infection model and a non-targeted liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS)-based metabolomics. Administering hippuric acid intraperitoneally in murine models of Escherichia coli infection or LPS-induced inflammation significantly heightened pro-inflammatory responses and innate immune cell activation. In vitro , hippuric acid selectively potentiated M1-like macrophage polarization (LPS + IFNγ) but had no effect on M2-like polarization (IL-4). Hippuric acid further enhanced responses to diverse MyD88-dependent TLR ligands, but not TRIF-dependent TLR3, implicating a possible mechanism of action via activation of TLR-MyD88 signaling. Genetic deletion of MyD88 abrogated the pro-inflammatory effects of hippuric acid both in vitro and in vivo , confirming its dependence on the MyD88 pathway. Transcriptomic and lipidomic analyses revealed that hippuric acid promoted cholesterol biosynthesis and lipid accumulation, linking microbial metabolism to lipid-driven immune activation. Notably, hippuric acid similarly enhanced pro-inflammatory responses in human macrophages, and its elevated levels correlated with increased sepsis mortality, highlighting its potential clinical relevance. These findings establish hippuric acid as a previously unrecognized microbial-derived inflammatory modulator, bridging gut microbial metabolism, lipid remodeling, and innate immune signaling, and offer new insights into its role in infection and inflammation.