Methylglyoxal is an antibacterial effector produced by macrophages during infection.

Publication date: Jul 09, 2025

Infected macrophages transition into aerobic glycolysis, a metabolic program crucial for controlling bacterial infection. However, antimicrobial mechanisms supported by aerobic glycolysis are unclear. Methylglyoxal is a highly toxic aldehyde that modifies proteins and DNA and is produced as a side product of glycolysis. We show that despite this toxicity, infected macrophages generate high levels of methylglyoxal during aerobic glycolysis while downregulating the detoxification system, including glyoxalase 1 (GLO1). Dampening methylglyoxal generation in mice resulted in enhanced survival of Listeria monocytogenes and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, whereas mice lacking Glo1 have increased methylglyoxal levels and improved infection control. Furthermore, bacteria unable to detoxify methylglyoxal (ΔgloA) exhibit attenuated virulence but are partially rescued in mice that cannot enter glycolysis and generate methylglyoxal. This loss of bacterial GloA results in up to a 1,000-fold greater genomic mutation frequency during infection. Collectively, these results suggest that methylglyoxal is an antimicrobial innate effector that defends against bacterial pathogens.

Concepts Keywords
High Animals
Host Anti-Bacterial Agents
Methylglyoxal Anti-Bacterial Agents
Mycobacterium bacterial pathogens
Tuberculosis Glycolysis
glycolysis
innate immunity
Lactoylglutathione Lyase
Lactoylglutathione Lyase
Listeria monocytogenes
Listeriosis
Macrophages
methylglyoxal
Mice
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Pyruvaldehyde
Pyruvaldehyde
Virulence

Semantics

Type Source Name
drug DRUGBANK Pyruvaldehyde
disease MESH infection
pathway REACTOME Glycolysis
disease MESH bacterial infection
disease IDO bacteria
disease IDO virulence
disease MESH mutation frequency
disease MESH Listeriosis

Original Article

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