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result(s) for
"Ly-6 antigen"
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Non-classical tissue monocytes and two functionally distinct populations of interstitial macrophages populate the mouse lung
2019
Resident tissue macrophages (RTM) can fulfill various tasks during development, homeostasis, inflammation and repair. In the lung, non-alveolar RTM, called interstitial macrophages (IM), importantly contribute to tissue homeostasis but remain little characterized. Here we show, using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), two phenotypically distinct subpopulations of long-lived monocyte-derived IM, i.e. CD206
+
and CD206
−
IM, as well as a discrete population of extravasating CD64
+
CD16.2
+
monocytes. CD206
+
IM are peribronchial self-maintaining RTM that constitutively produce high levels of chemokines and immunosuppressive cytokines. Conversely, CD206
−
IM preferentially populate the alveolar interstitium and exhibit features of antigen-presenting cells. In addition, our data support that CD64
+
CD16.2
+
monocytes arise from intravascular Ly-6C
lo
patrolling monocytes that enter the tissue at steady-state to become putative precursors of CD206
−
IM. This study expands our knowledge about the complexity of lung IM and reveals an ontogenic pathway for one IM subset, an important step for elaborating future macrophage-targeted therapies.
Functional diversity of tissue-resident macrophages and signals governing their ontogeny and turnover remain unknown for the majority of tissues. Here the authors describe two phenotypically and functionally distinct long-lived populations of lung interstitial macrophages and their putative blood-derived monocytic precursor.
Journal Article
Locally instructed CXCR4hi neutrophils trigger environment-driven allergic asthma through the release of neutrophil extracellular traps
by
Cataldo, Didier
,
Bureau, Fabrice
,
Marichal, Thomas
in
631/250/2504/223/1699
,
692/699/249/2510/31
,
Air pollution
2019
Low exposure to microbial products, respiratory viral infections and air pollution are major risk factors for allergic asthma, yet the mechanistic links between such conditions and host susceptibility to type 2 allergic disorders remain unclear. Through the use of single-cell RNA sequencing, we characterized lung neutrophils in mice exposed to a pro-allergic low dose of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or a protective high dose of LPS before exposure to house dust mites. Unlike exposure to a high dose of LPS, exposure to a low dose of LPS instructed recruited neutrophils to upregulate their expression of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and to release neutrophil extracellular traps. Low-dose LPS–induced neutrophils and neutrophil extracellular traps potentiated the uptake of house dust mites by CD11b
+
Ly-6C
+
dendritic cells and type 2 allergic airway inflammation in response to house dust mites. Neutrophil extracellular traps derived from CXCR4
hi
neutrophils were also needed to mediate allergic asthma triggered by infection with influenza virus or exposure to ozone. Our study indicates that apparently unrelated environmental risk factors can shape recruited lung neutrophils to promote the initiation of allergic asthma.
Marichal and colleagues show that lung neutrophils in mice exposed to three distinct pro-allergic conditions release neutrophil extracellular traps that potentiate allergen uptake by dendritic cells and type 2 allergic inflammation.
Journal Article
Sleep modulates haematopoiesis and protects against atherosclerosis
2019
Sleep is integral to life
1
. Although insufficient or disrupted sleep increases the risk of multiple pathological conditions, including cardiovascular disease
2
, we know little about the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which sleep maintains cardiovascular health. Here we report that sleep regulates haematopoiesis and protects against atherosclerosis in mice. We show that mice subjected to sleep fragmentation produce more Ly-6C
high
monocytes, develop larger atherosclerotic lesions and produce less hypocretin—a stimulatory and wake-promoting neuropeptide—in the lateral hypothalamus. Hypocretin controls myelopoiesis by restricting the production of CSF1 by hypocretin-receptor-expressing pre-neutrophils in the bone marrow. Whereas hypocretin-null and haematopoietic hypocretin-receptor-null mice develop monocytosis and accelerated atherosclerosis, sleep-fragmented mice with either haematopoietic CSF1 deficiency or hypocretin supplementation have reduced numbers of circulating monocytes and smaller atherosclerotic lesions. Together, these results identify a neuro-immune axis that links sleep to haematopoiesis and atherosclerosis.
The fragmentation of sleep in
Apoe
−/−
mice induces monocytosis and accelerated atherosclerosis due to a reduction in hypocretin that otherwise restricts bone marrow CSF1 availability.
Journal Article
Mid-life microbiota crises: middle age is associated with pervasive neuroimmune alterations that are reversed by targeting the gut microbiome
by
Moloney, Gerard M
,
Fouhy Fiona
,
Sandhu, Kiran V
in
Aging
,
Cognitive ability
,
Dietary supplements
2020
Male middle age is a transitional period where many physiological and psychological changes occur leading to cognitive and behavioural alterations, and a deterioration of brain function. However, the mechanisms underpinning such changes are unclear. The gut microbiome has been implicated as a key mediator in the communication between the gut and the brain, and in the regulation of brain homeostasis, including brain immune cell function. Thus, we tested whether targeting the gut microbiome by prebiotic supplementation may alter microglia activation and brain function in ageing. Male young adult (8 weeks) and middle-aged (10 months) C57BL/6 mice received diet enriched with a prebiotic (10% oligofructose-enriched inulin) or control chow for 14 weeks. Prebiotic supplementation differentially altered the gut microbiota profile in young and middle-aged mice with changes correlating with faecal metabolites. Functionally, this translated into a reversal of stress-induced immune priming in middle-aged mice. In addition, a reduction in ageing-induced infiltration of Ly-6Chi monocytes into the brain coupled with a reversal in ageing-related increases in a subset of activated microglia (Ly-6C+) was observed. Taken together, these data highlight a potential pathway by which targeting the gut microbiome with prebiotics can modulate the peripheral immune response and alter neuroinflammation in middle age. Our data highlight a novel strategy for the amelioration of age-related neuroinflammatory pathologies and brain function.
Journal Article
Inhibition of monoacylglycerol lipase, an anti-inflammatory and antifibrogenic strategy in the liver
by
Wan, JingHong
,
Hegde, Pushpa
,
Ribeiro-Parenti, Lara
in
2-Arachidonoylglycerol
,
Arachidonic acid
,
Atherosclerosis
2019
ObjectiveSustained inflammation originating from macrophages is a driving force of fibrosis progression and resolution. Monoacylglycerol lipase (MAGL) is the rate-limiting enzyme in the degradation of monoacylglycerols. It is a proinflammatory enzyme that metabolises 2-arachidonoylglycerol, an endocannabinoid receptor ligand, into arachidonic acid. Here, we investigated the impact of MAGL on inflammation and fibrosis during chronic liver injury.DesignC57BL/6J mice and mice with global invalidation of MAGL (MAGL -/- ), or myeloid-specific deletion of either MAGL (MAGLMye-/-), ATG5 (ATGMye-/-) or CB2 (CB2Mye-/-), were used. Fibrosis was induced by repeated carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) injections or bile duct ligation (BDL). Studies were performed on peritoneal or bone marrow-derived macrophages and Kupffer cells.ResultsMAGL -/- or MAGLMye-/- mice exposed to CCl4 or subjected to BDL were more resistant to inflammation and fibrosis than wild-type counterparts. Therapeutic intervention with MJN110, an MAGL inhibitor, reduced hepatic macrophage number and inflammatory gene expression and slowed down fibrosis progression. MAGL inhibitors also accelerated fibrosis regression and increased Ly-6Clow macrophage number. Antifibrogenic effects exclusively relied on MAGL inhibition in macrophages, since MJN110 treatment of MAGLMye-/- BDL mice did not further decrease liver fibrosis. Cultured macrophages exposed to MJN110 or from MAGLMye-/- mice displayed reduced cytokine secretion. These effects were independent of the cannabinoid receptor 2, as they were preserved in CB2Mye-/- mice. They relied on macrophage autophagy, since anti-inflammatory and antifibrogenic effects of MJN110 were lost in ATG5Mye-/- BDL mice, and were associated with increased autophagic flux and autophagosome biosynthesis in macrophages when MAGL was pharmacologically or genetically inhibited.ConclusionMAGL is an immunometabolic target in the liver. MAGL inhibitors may show promising antifibrogenic effects during chronic liver injury.
Journal Article
CD11b+ lung dendritic cells at different stages of maturation induce Th17 or Th2 differentiation
2021
Dendritic cells (DC) in the lung that induce Th17 differentiation remain incompletely understood, in part because conventional CD11b
+
DCs (cDC2) are heterogeneous. Here, we report a population of cDCs that rapidly accumulates in lungs of mice following house dust extract inhalation. These cells are Ly-6C
+
, are developmentally and phenotypically similar to cDC2, and strongly promote Th17 differentiation ex vivo. Single cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-Seq) of lung cDC2 indicates 5 distinct clusters. Pseudotime analysis of scRNA-Seq data and adoptive transfer experiments with purified cDC2 subpopulations suggest stepwise developmental progression of immature Ly-6C
+
Ly-6A/E
+
cDC2 to mature Ly-6C
–
CD301b
+
lung resident cDC2 lacking
Ccr7
expression, which then further mature into CD200
+
migratory cDC2 expressing
Ccr7
. Partially mature Ly-6C
+
Ly-6A/E
–
CD301b
–
cDC2, which express
Il1b
, promote Th17 differentiation. By contrast, CD200
+
mature cDC2 strongly induce Th2, but not Th17, differentiation. Thus, Th17 and Th2 differentiation are promoted by lung cDC2 at distinct stages of maturation.
Dendritic cells in the lung may be specialised to mediate specific types of immune function. Here the authors show that subpopulations of mouse CD11b
+
lung DC at different stages of maturation and phenotype can promote Th17 or Th2 CD4
+
T cell differentiation.
Journal Article
Diet Rich in Animal Protein Promotes Pro-inflammatory Macrophage Response and Exacerbates Colitis in Mice
by
Galanova, Natalie
,
Tlaskalova-Hogenova, Helena
,
Prochazkova, Petra
in
Adaptive immunity
,
Animal models
,
Bisphosphonates
2019
Diet is a major factor determining gut microbiota composition and perturbances in this complex ecosystem are associated with the inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Here, we used gnotobiotic approach to analyze, how interaction between diet rich in proteins and gut microbiota influences the sensitivity to intestinal inflammation in murine model of ulcerative colitis. We found that diet rich in animal protein (aHPD) exacerbates acute dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis while diet rich in plant protein (pHPD) does not. The deleterious effect of aHPD was also apparent in chronic DSS colitis and was associated with distinct changes in gut bacteria and fungi. Therefore, we induced acute DSS-colitis in germ-free mice and transferred gut microbiota from aCD or aHPD fed mice to find that this effect requires presence of microbes and aHPD at the same time. The aHPD did not change the number of regulatory T cells or Th17 cells and still worsened the colitis in immuno-deficient RAG2 knock-out mice suggesting that this effect was not dependent on adaptive immunity. The pro-inflammatory effect of aHPD was, however, abrogated when splenic macrophages were depleted with clodronate liposomes. This treatment prevented aHPD induced increase in colonic Ly-6C
pro-inflammatory monocytes, but the ratio of resident Ly-6C
macrophages was not changed. These data show that the interactions between dietary protein of animal origin and gut microbiota increase sensitivity to intestinal inflammation by promoting pro-inflammatory response of monocytes.
Journal Article
Neuraminidase-1 promotes heart failure after ischemia/reperfusion injury by affecting cardiomyocytes and invading monocytes/macrophages
by
Erschow Sergej
,
Battmer Karin
,
Hilfiker-Kleiner Denise
in
Bone marrow
,
Bone marrow transplantation
,
Cardiomyocytes
2020
Neuraminidase (NEU)1 forms a multienzyme complex with beta-galactosidase (β-GAL) and protective-protein/cathepsin (PPC) A, which cleaves sialic-acids from cell surface glycoconjugates. We investigated the role of NEU1 in the myocardium after ischemia/reperfusion (I/R). Three days after inducing I/R, left ventricles (LV) of male mice (3 months-old) displayed upregulated neuraminidase activity and increased NEU1, β-GAL and PPCA expression. Mice hypomorphic for neu1 (hNEU1) had less neuraminidase activity, fewer pro-inflammatory (Lin−CD11b+F4/80+Ly-6Chigh), and more anti-inflammatory macrophages (Lin−CD11b+F4/80+Ly-6Clow) 3 days after I/R, and less LV dysfunction 14 days after I/R. WT mice transplanted with hNEU1-bone marrow (BM) and hNEU1 mice with WT-BM showed significantly better LV function 14 days after I/R compared with WT mice with WT-BM. Mice with a cardiomyocyte-specific NEU1 overexpression displayed no difference in inflammation 3 days after I/R, but showed increased cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, reduced expression and mislocalization of Connexin-43 in gap junctions, and LV dysfunction despite a similar infarct scar size to WT mice 14 days after I/R. The upregulation of NEU1 after I/R contributes to heart failure by promoting inflammation in invading monocytes/macrophages, enhancing cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, and impairing gap junction function, suggesting that systemic NEU1 inhibition may reduce heart failure after I/R.
Journal Article
PD-L1 signaling in reactive astrocytes counteracts neuroinflammation and ameliorates neuronal damage after traumatic brain injury
2022
Background
Tissue damage and cellular destruction are the major events in traumatic brain injury (TBI), which trigger sterile neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses in the brain. While appropriate acute and transient neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses facilitate the repair and adaptation of injured brain tissues, prolonged and excessive neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses exacerbate brain damage. The mechanisms that control the intensity and duration of neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses in TBI largely remain elusive.
Methods
We used the controlled cortical impact (CCI) model of TBI to study the role of immune checkpoints (ICPs), key regulators of immune homeostasis, in the regulation of neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses in the brain in vivo
.
Results
We found that de novo expression of PD-L1, a potent inhibitory ICP, was robustly and transiently induced in reactive astrocytes, but not in microglia, neurons, or oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). These PD-L1
+
reactive astrocytes were highly enriched to form a dense zone around the TBI lesion. Blockade of PD-L1 signaling enlarged brain tissue cavity size, increased infiltration of inflammatory Ly-6C
High
monocytes/macrophages (M/M
ɸ
) but not tissue-repairing Ly-6C
Low
F4/80
+
M/M
ɸ
, and worsened TBI outcomes in mice. PD-L1 gene knockout enhanced production of CCL2 that is best known for its ability to interact with its cognate receptor CCR2 on Ly-6C
High
M/M
ϕ
to chemotactically recruit these cells into inflammatory sites. Mechanically, PD-L1 signaling in astrocytes likely exhibits dual inhibitory activities for the prevention of excessive neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses to TBI through (1) the PD-1/PD-L1 axis to suppress the activity of brain-infiltrating PD-1
+
immune cells, such as PD-1
+
T cells, and (2) PD-L1 intrinsic signaling to regulate the timing and intensity of astrocyte reactions to TBI.
Conclusions
PD-L1
+
astrocytes act as a gatekeeper to the brain to control TBI-related neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory responses, thereby opening a novel avenue to study the role of ICP–neuroimmune axes in the pathophysiology of TBI and other neurological disorders.
Journal Article
Foxp3+ Regulatory T Cells Inhibit CCl4-Induced Liver Inflammation and Fibrosis by Regulating Tissue Cellular Immunity
by
Ikeno, Yoshinobu
,
Taura, Kojiro
,
Watanabe, Hitomi
in
Amphiregulin
,
Antibodies
,
Carbon tetrachloride
2020
Foxp3+ regulatory T (Treg) cells are pivotal in maintaining immunological self-tolerance and tissue homeostasis; however, it remains unclear how tissue Treg cells respond to liver injury and regulate chronic inflammation, which can cause liver fibrosis. We report here that hepatic Treg cells play a critical role in preventing liver pathology by suppressing inflammatory cellular immunity that can promote liver damage and fibrosis. Chronic liver inflammation induced by injections of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) led to preferential expansion of hepatic Treg cells that prevented liver fibrosis. In contrast, depletion of Treg cells in the CCl4-induced liver fibrosis model exacerbated the severity of liver pathology. Treg depletion unleashed tissue cellular immunity and drove the activation and expansion of the pro-fibrotic IL-4-producing T helper 2 cells, as well as CCR2high Ly-6Chigh inflammatory monocytes/macrophages in the inflamed liver. Although Treg expression of amphiregulin plays a key role in tissue remodeling and repair in various inflammation models, amphiregulin from hepatic Treg cells, the largest producer among liver immune cells, was dispensable for maintaining liver homeostasis and preventing liver fibrosis during CCl4-induced chronic inflammation. Our results indicate that Treg cells control chronic liver inflammation and fibrosis by regulating the aberrant activation and functions of immune effector cells. Harnessing Treg functions, which effectively regulate tissue cellular immunity, may be a therapeutic strategy for preventing and treating liver fibrosis.
Journal Article