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result(s) for
"airway macrophages"
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Airway Macrophages Encompass Transcriptionally and Functionally Distinct Subsets Altered by Smoking
by
Fievez, Laurence
,
Guiot, Julien
,
Marichal, Thomas
in
adult
,
airway macrophages
,
Airway management
2022
Abstract
Alveolar macrophages (AMs) are functionally important innate cells involved in lung homeostasis and immunity and whose diversity in health and disease is a subject of intense investigations. Yet, it remains unclear to what extent conditions like smoking or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) trigger changes in the AM compartment. Here, we aimed to explore heterogeneity of human AMs isolated from healthy nonsmokers, smokers without COPD, and smokers with COPD by analyzing BAL fluid cells by flow cytometry and bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing. We found that subpopulations of BAL fluid CD206+ macrophages could be distinguished based on their degree of autofluorescence in each subject analyzed. CD206+ autofluorescenthigh AMs were identified as classical, self-proliferative AM, whereas autofluorescentlow AMs were expressing both monocyte and classical AM-related genes, supportive of a monocytic origin. Of note, monocyte-derived autofluorescentlow AMs exhibited a functionally distinct immunoregulatory profile, including the ability to secrete the immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10. Interestingly, single-cell RNA-sequencing analyses showed that transcriptionally distinct clusters of classical and monocyte-derived AM were uniquely enriched in smokers with and without COPD as compared with healthy nonsmokers. Of note, such smoking-associated clusters exhibited gene signatures enriched in detoxification, oxidative stress, and proinflammatory responses. Our study independently confirms previous reports supporting that monocyte-derived macrophages coexist with classical AM in the airways of healthy subjects and patients with COPD and identifies smoking-associated changes in the AM compartment that may favor COPD initiation or progression.
Journal Article
The Transferrin Receptor CD71 Delineates Functionally Distinct Airway Macrophage Subsets during Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
2019
Abstract
Rationale
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a devastating progressive disease with limited therapeutic options. Airway macrophages (AMs) are key components of the defense of the airways and are implicated in the pathogenesis of IPF. Alterations in iron metabolism have been described during fibrotic lung disease and in murine models of lung fibrosis. However, the role of transferrin receptor 1 (CD71)-expressing AMs in IPF is not known.
Objectives
To assess the role of CD71-expressing AMs in the IPF lung.
Methods
We used multiparametric flow cytometry, gene expression analysis, and phagocytosis/transferrin uptake assays to delineate the role of AMs expressing or lacking CD71 in the BAL of patients with IPF and of healthy control subjects.
Measurements and Main Results
There was a distinct increase in proportions of AMs lacking CD71 in patients with IPF compared with healthy control subjects. Concentrations of BAL transferrin were enhanced in IPF-BAL, and furthermore, CD71− AMs had an impaired ability to sequester transferrin. CD71+ and CD71− AMs were phenotypically, functionally, and transcriptionally distinct, with CD71− AMs characterized by reduced expression of markers of macrophage maturity, impaired phagocytosis, and enhanced expression of profibrotic genes. Importantly, proportions of AMs lacking CD71 were independently associated with worse survival, underlining the importance of this population in IPF and as a potential therapeutic target.
Conclusions
Taken together, these data highlight how CD71 delineates AM subsets that play distinct roles in IPF and furthermore show that CD71− AMs may be an important pathogenic component of fibrotic lung disease.
Journal Article
Human airway macrophages are metabolically reprogrammed by IFN-γ resulting in glycolysis-dependent functional plasticity
by
Gogan, Karl M
,
Keane, Joseph
,
Duffin, Emily
in
airway macrophages
,
Cells, Cultured
,
cytokines
2024
Airway macrophages (AM) are the predominant immune cell in the lung and play a crucial role in preventing infection, making them a target for host directed therapy. Macrophage effector functions are associated with cellular metabolism. A knowledge gap remains in understanding metabolic reprogramming and functional plasticity of distinct human macrophage subpopulations, especially in lung resident AM. We examined tissue-resident AM and monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM; as a model of blood derived macrophages) in their resting state and after priming with IFN-γ or IL-4 to model the Th1/Th2 axis in the lung. Human macrophages, regardless of origin, had a strong induction of glycolysis in response to IFN-γ or upon stimulation. IFN-γ significantly enhanced cellular energetics in both AM and MDM by upregulating both glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation. Upon stimulation, AM do not decrease oxidative phosphorylation unlike MDM which shift to ‘Warburg’-like metabolism. IFN-γ priming promoted cytokine secretion in AM. Blocking glycolysis with 2-deoxyglucose significantly reduced IFN-γ driven cytokine production in AM, indicating that IFN-γ induces functional plasticity in human AM, which is mechanistically mediated by glycolysis. Directly comparing responses between macrophages, AM were more responsive to IFN-γ priming and dependent on glycolysis for cytokine secretion than MDM. Interestingly, TNF production was under the control of glycolysis in AM and not in MDM. MDM exhibited glycolysis-dependent upregulation of HLA-DR and CD40, whereas IFN-γ upregulated HLA-DR and CD40 on AM independently of glycolysis. These data indicate that human AM are functionally plastic and respond to IFN-γ in a manner distinct from MDM. These data provide evidence that human AM are a tractable target for inhalable immunomodulatory therapies for respiratory diseases. Inside the human body, immune cells known as macrophages are constantly looking for microbes, cell debris and other potential threats to engulf and digest. If a macrophage detects a microbe, it activates and releases molecules called cytokines, which induce further immune responses that help to eliminate the invader. The macrophages found in the lungs, known as airway macrophages, defend against pollutants and airborne microbes and are therefore key for maintaining respiratory health. Despite this, previous studies have suggested that airway macrophages are not as good at responding to infections as other types of macrophages. Certain cytokines can cause macrophages to switch how they generate the chemical energy needed to fuel various processes in the cell. However, it remains unclear if it may be possible to develop therapies that boost airway macrophage activity during infection by modifying how they produce chemical energy. To investigate, Cox et al. compared how human airway macrophages and macrophages that originate in the blood alter their production of chemical energy in response to cues from the immune system that indicate an infection is present. The experiments showed that exposure to a specific cytokine known as IFN-γ caused both macrophage types to produce more chemical energy using a metabolic process known as glycolysis. Inhibiting glycolysis induced by IFN-γ had a much bigger effect on the ability of the airway macrophages to produce cytokines than it had on blood macrophages. Furthermore, glycolysis controlled the production of a particular cytokine called TNF in the airway macrophages, but not the blood macrophages. The findings demonstrate that airway macrophages alter how they produce chemical energy during infections in a different way to blood macrophages. Since TNF is a crucial cytokine for defending against respiratory infections, understanding how it is regulated in the lung could help researchers to develop inhalable therapies to boost its production in patients with respiratory infections that are difficult to treat. The specificity of this approach could ultimately limit side effects compared to therapies that act throughout the body.
Journal Article
Transcriptomic Plasticity of Human Alveolar Macrophages Revealed by Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Following Drug Exposure: Implications for Therapeutic Development
by
O’Sullivan, Brendan J.
,
Nguyen, Quan H.
,
Tan, Maxine E.
in
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
,
COVID-19
,
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
2025
Alveolar macrophages (AM) must perform three seemingly opposing roles including homeostasis, driving inflammation, and facilitating tissue repair. Whilst there is now consensus (supported by a large body of human single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data) that the cell subsets that perform these tasks can readily be found based on their transcriptome, their ontogeny has remained unclear. Moreover, there is agreement that in all types of pulmonary fibrosis (PF) there is an expanded population of profibrotic AM that may aberrantly drive PF. From a therapeutic viewpoint, there is great appeal in the notion that the transcriptional program in different AM subsets is not fixed but remains plastic and amenable to pharmacological reprogramming. Accordingly, this study addresses this question by performing scRNA-seq on human AM following treatment with drugs or perturbagens including pioglitazone, trametinib, nintedanib, lipopolysaccharide and the natural compound endiandrin A. Each treatment induced a unique global transcriptional change, driving the cells towards distinct subsets, further supported by trajectory analysis, confirming a high level of plasticity. Confirmatory experiments using qPCR demonstrated that single exposure to a compound induced a relatively stable transcriptome, whereas serial exposure to a different compound allowed the cells to be reprogrammed yet again to a different phenotype. These findings add new insight into the biology of AM and support the development of novel therapies to treat PF.
Journal Article
Airway macrophages display decreased expression of receptors mediating and regulating scavenging in early cystic fibrosis lung disease
by
Manaï, Badies H. A. N.
,
Giacalone, Vincent D.
,
Janssens, Hettie M.
in
airway macrophages
,
Allergic diseases
,
Antigens
2023
Cystic fibrosis (CF) airway disease is characterized by chronic inflammation, featuring neutrophil influx to the lumen. Airway macrophages (AMs) can promote both inflammation and resolution, and are thus critical to maintaining and restoring homeostasis. CF AM functions, specifically scavenging activity and resolution of inflammation, have been shown to be impaired, yet underlying processes remain unknown. We hypothesized that impaired CF AM function results from an altered expression of receptors that mediate or regulate scavenging, and set out to investigate changes in expression of these markers during the early stages of CF lung disease.
Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) was collected from 50 children with CF aged 1, 3 or 5 years. BALF cells were analyzed using flow cytometry. Expression levels of surface markers on AMs were expressed as median fluorescence intensities (MFI) or percentage of AMs positive for these markers. The effect of age and neutrophilic inflammation, among other variables, on marker expression was assessed with a multivariate linear regression model.
AM expression of scavenger receptor CD163 decreased with age (p = 0.016) and was negatively correlated with BALF %neutrophils (r = -0.34, p = 0.016). AM expression of immune checkpoint molecule SIRPα also decreased with age (p = 0.0006), but did not correlate with BALF %neutrophils. Percentage of AMs expressing lipid scavenger CD36 was low overall (mean 20.1% ± 16.5) and did not correlate with other factors. Conversely, expression of immune checkpoint PD-1 was observed on the majority of AMs (mean PD-1
72.9% ± 11.8), but it, too, was not affected by age or BALF %neutrophils. Compared to matched blood monocytes, AMs had a higher expression of CD16, CD91, and PD-1, and a lower expression of CD163, SIRPα and CD36.
In BALF of preschool children with CF, higher age and/or increased neutrophilic inflammation coincided with decreased expression of scavenger receptors on AMs. Expression of scavenging receptors and regulators showed a distinctly different pattern in AMs compared to blood monocytes. These findings suggest AM capacity to counter inflammation and promote homeostasis reduces during initiation of CF airway disease and highlight new avenues of investigation into impaired CF AM function.
Journal Article
Carbon content in airway macrophages and genomic instability in Chinese carbon black packers
2020
Carbon black (CB) particulates as virtually pure elemental carbon can deposit deep in the lungs of humans. International Agency for Research on Cancer classified CB as a Group 2B carcinogen due to inconclusive human evidence. A molecular epidemiological study was conducted in an established cohort of CB packers (CBP) to assess associations between CB exposure and genomic instability in peripheral lymphocytes using cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay (CBMN). Carbon content in airway macrophages (CCAM) was quantified as a bio-effective dosimeter for chronic CB exposure. Dose–response observed in CBPs was compared to that seen in workers exposed to diesel exhaust. The association between CB exposure status and CBMN endpoints was identified in 85 CBPs and 106 non-CBPs from a 2012 visit and replicated in 127 CBPs and 105 non-CBPs from a 2018 visit. The proportion of cytoplasm area occupied by carbon particles in airway macrophages was over fivefold higher in current CBPs compared to non-CBPs and was associated with CBMN endpoints in a dose-dependent manner. CB aerosol and diesel exhaust shared the same potency of inducing genomic instability in workers. Circulatory pro-inflammatory factors especially TNF-α was found to mediate associations between CB exposure and CBMN endpoints. In vitro functional validation supported the role of TNF-α in inducing genomic instability. An estimated range of lower limits of benchmark dose of 4.19–7.28% of CCAM was recommended for risk assessment. Chronic CB exposure increased genomic instability in human circulation and this provided novel evidence supporting its reclassification as a human carcinogen.
Journal Article
Carbon load in airway macrophages as a biomarker of exposure to particulate air pollution; a longitudinal study of an international Panel
by
Nawrot, Tim S.
,
Bai, Yang
,
Nemery, Benoit
in
Air pollution
,
Airway (Medicine)
,
Airway macrophages
2018
Background
Carbon load in airway macrophages (AM) has been proposed as an internal marker to assess long-term exposure to combustion-derived pollutant particles. However, it is not known how this biomarker is affected by changes in exposure. We studied the clearance kinetics of black carbon (BC) in AM, obtained by sputum induction, in a one-year panel study.
Methods
AM BC was measured 8 times with 6 weeks intervals in healthy young subjects: 15 long-term residents in Leuven, Belgium (BE, mean annual PM
10
20–30 μg/m
3
) and 30 newcomers having arrived recently (< 3 weeks) in Leuven from highly polluted cities (mean annual PM
10
> 50 μg/m
3
) in low and middle-income countries (LMIC,
n
= 15), or from low to moderately polluted cities in high-income countries (HIC, n = 15). The median and 90th percentile values of AM BC were quantified by image analysis of 25 macrophages per sputum sample; the carbonaceous nature of the black inclusions in AM was verified by Femtosecond Pulsed Laser Microscopy in 30 macrophages. We used a Bayesian hierarchical single-exponential decay model to describe the evolution of AM BC.
Results
In the LMIC group, the mean (95% credible interval) initial quantity (R
0
) of median AM BC [1.122 (0.750–1.509) μm
2
] was higher than in the HIC group [0.387 (0.168–0.613) μm
2
] and BE group [0.275 (0.147–0.404) μm
2
]. Median AM BC content decreased in the LMIC group (decay constant 0.013 μm
2
/day), but remained stable over one year in the other two groups. In the LMIC group, clearance half-lives of 53 (30–99) and 116 (63–231) days, were calculated for median and 90th percentile AM BC, respectively.
Conclusions
In this real-life study of an international panel of healthy young subjects, we demonstrated that carbon load in airway macrophages obtained by induced sputum reflects past long-term exposure to particulate air pollution. Values of AM BC do not change over one year when exposure remains stable, but AM BC decreases upon moving from high to moderate exposure, with average half-lives of 53 and 116 days depending on the carbon load.
Journal Article
Collagen 1a1 Expression by Airway Macrophages Increases In Fibrotic ILDs and Is Associated With FVC Decline and Increased Mortality
by
Renzoni, Elizabeth
,
Mastrodemou, Semeli
,
Fanidis, Dionysios
in
Adult
,
Aged
,
airway macrophages
2021
Within the Interstitial Lung Diseases (ILD), patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and a subset of those with non-IPF fibrotic ILD have a distinct clinical phenotype of progression despite management. This group of patients has been collectively termed the progressive fibrotic phenotype (PFP). Their early recognition may facilitate access to antifibrotic therapies to prevent or slow progression. Macrophages/monocytes within the lung orchestrate the progression and maintenance of fibrosis. A novel role for monocyte-derived macrophages during tissue damage and wound healing is the expression of collagens. We examined Collagen 1a1 expression in airway macrophages from ILD patients at diagnosis. COL1A1 mRNA levels from BAL cells were elevated in IPF and Non-IPF patients. The presence of a UIP pattern and a subsequent progressive phenotype were significantly associated with the higher BAL COL1A1 levels. In Non-IPF patients, higher COL1A1 levels were associated with a more than twofold increase in mortality. The intracellular localisation of COL1A1 in airway macrophages was demonstrated by confocal microscopy in CD45 and CD163 co-staining assays. Additionally, airway macrophages co-expressed COL1A1 with the profibrotic SPP1 gene product osteopontin. The levels of SPP1 mRNA and OPN in the BAL were significantly higher in IPF and Non-IPF patients relative to healthy. Our results suggest that profibrotic airway macrophages are increased in the BAL of patients with IPF and other ILDs and co-express COL1A1 and OPN. Importantly, COL1A1 expression by pro-fibrotic airway macrophages could be a marker of disease progression and poor survival in ILDs.
Journal Article
Chronic exposure to diesel exhaust may cause small airway wall thickening without lumen narrowing: a quantitative computerized tomography study in Chinese diesel engine testers
2021
Background
Diesel exhaust (DE) is a major source of ultrafine particulate matters (PM) in ambient air and contaminates many occupational settings. Airway remodeling assessed using computerized tomography (CT) correlates well with spirometry in patients with obstructive lung diseases. Structural changes of small airways caused by chronic DE exposure is unknown. Wall and lumen areas of 6th and 9th generations of four candidate airways were quantified using end-inhalation CT scans in 78 diesel engine testers (DET) and 76 non-DETs. Carbon content in airway macrophage (CCAM) in sputum was quantified to assess the dose-response relationship.
Results
Environmental monitoring and CCAM showed a much higher PM exposure in DETs, which was associated with higher wall area and wall area percent for 6th generation of airways. However, no reduction in lumen area was identified. No study subjects met spirometry diagnosis of airway obstruction. This suggested that small airway wall thickening without lumen narrowing may be an early feature of airway remodeling in DETs. The effect of DE exposure status on wall area percent did not differ by lobes or smoking status. Although the trend test was of borderline significance between categorized CCAM and wall area percent, subjects in the highest CCAM category has a 14% increase in wall area percent for the 6th generation of airways compared to subjects in the lowest category. The impact of DE exposure on FEV1 can be partially explained by the wall area percent with mediation effect size equal to 20%, P
perm
= 0.028).
Conclusions
Small airway wall thickening without lumen narrowing may be an early image feature detected by CT and underlie the pathology of lung injury in DETs. The pattern of changes in small airway dimensions, i.e., thicker airway wall without lumen narrowing caused by occupational DE exposure was different to that (i.e., thicker airway wall with lumen narrowing) seen in our previous study of workers exposed to nano-scale carbon black aerosol, suggesting constituents other than carbon cores may contribute to such differences. Our study provides some imaging indications of the understanding of the pulmonary toxicity of combustion derived airborne particulate matters in humans.
Journal Article
Dendritic Cells and Macrophages Form a Transepithelial Network against Foreign Particulate Antigens
by
Rothen-Rutishauser, Barbara
,
Blank, Fabian
,
Gehr, Peter
in
Animals
,
Antigens - immunology
,
Cell culture
2007
Fine particles (0.1–2.5 μm in diameter) may cause increased pulmonary morbidity and mortality. We demonstrate with a cell culture model of the human epithelial airway wall that dendritic cells extend processes between epithelial cells through the tight junctions to collect particles in the “luminal space” and to transport them through cytoplasmic processes between epithelial cells across the epithelium or to transmigrate through the epithelium to take up particles on the epithelial surface. Furthermore, dendritic cells interacted with particle-loaded macrophages on top of the epithelium and with other dendritic cells within or beneath the epithelium to take over particles. By comparing the cellular interplay of dendritic cells and macrophages across epithelial monolayers of different transepithelial electrical resistance, we found that more dendritic cells were involved in particle uptake in A549 cultures showing a low transepithelial electrical resistance compared with dendritic cells in16HBE14o cultures showing a high transepithelial electrical resistance 10 min (23.9% versus 9.5%) and 4 h (42.1% versus 14.6%) after particle exposition. In contrast, the macrophages in A549 co-cultures showed a significantly lower involvement in particle uptake compared with 16HBE14o co-cultures 10 min (12.8% versus 42.8%) and 4 h (57.4% versus 82.7%) after particle exposition. Hence we postulate that the epithelial integrity influences the particle uptake by dendritic cells, and that these two cell types collaborate as sentinels against foreign particulate antigen by building a transepithelial interacting cellular network.
Journal Article