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Frontiers in Immunology 2023The liver is situated at the interface of the gut and circulation where it acts as a filter for blood-borne and gut-derived microbes and biological molecules, promoting... (Review)
Review
The liver is situated at the interface of the gut and circulation where it acts as a filter for blood-borne and gut-derived microbes and biological molecules, promoting tolerance of non-invasive antigens while driving immune responses against pathogenic ones. Liver resident immune cells such as Kupffer cells (KCs), a subset of macrophages, maintain homeostasis under physiological conditions. However, upon liver injury, these cells and others recruited from circulation participate in the response to injury and the repair of tissue damage. Such response is thus spatially and temporally regulated and implicates interconnected cells of immune and non-immune nature. This review will describe the hepatic immune environment during acute liver injury and the subsequent wound healing process. In its early stages, the wound healing immune response involves a necroinflammatory process characterized by partial depletion of resident KCs and lymphocytes and a significant infiltration of myeloid cells including monocyte-derived macrophages (MoMFs) complemented by a wave of pro-inflammatory mediators. The subsequent repair stage includes restoring KCs, initiating angiogenesis, renewing extracellular matrix and enhancing proliferation/activation of resident parenchymal and mesenchymal cells. This review will focus on the multifaceted role of hepatic macrophages, including KCs and MoMFs, and their spatial distribution and roles during acute liver injury.
Topics: Liver; Macrophages; Kupffer Cells; Hepatocytes; Myeloid Cells
PubMed: 37736102
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1237042 -
Experimental Neurology Apr 2024Cerebrovascular diseases are a major cause of stroke and dementia, both requiring long-term care. These diseases involve multiple pathophysiologies, with mitochondrial...
Cerebrovascular diseases are a major cause of stroke and dementia, both requiring long-term care. These diseases involve multiple pathophysiologies, with mitochondrial dysfunction being a crucial contributor to the initiation of inflammation, apoptosis, and oxidative stress, resulting in injuries to neurovascular units that include neuronal cell death, endothelial cell death, glial activation, and blood-brain barrier disruption. To maintain brain homeostasis against these pathogenic conditions, brain immune cells, including border-associated macrophages and microglia, play significant roles as brain innate immunity cells in the pathophysiology of cerebrovascular injury. Although microglia have long been recognized as significant contributors to neuroinflammation, attention has recently shifted to border-associated macrophages, such as perivascular macrophages (PVMs), which have been studied based on their crucial roles in the brain. These cells are strategically positioned around the walls of brain vessels, where they mainly perform critical functions, such as perivascular drainage, cerebrovascular flexibility, phagocytic activity, antigen presentation, activation of inflammatory responses, and preservation of blood-brain barrier integrity. Although PVMs act as scavenger and surveillant cells under normal conditions, these cells exert harmful effects under pathological conditions. PVMs detect mitochondrial dysfunction in injured cells and implement pathological changes to regulate brain homeostasis. Therefore, PVMs are promising as they play a significant role in mitochondrial dysfunction and, in turn, disrupt the homeostatic condition. Herein, we summarize the significant roles of PVMs in cerebrovascular diseases, especially ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke and dementia, mainly in correlation with inflammation. A better understanding of the biology and pathobiology of PVMs may lead to new insights on and therapeutic strategies for cerebrovascular diseases.
Topics: Humans; Macrophages; Brain; Cerebrovascular Disorders; Inflammation; Mitochondrial Diseases; Dementia
PubMed: 38185314
DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2024.114680 -
Reshaping Intratumoral Mononuclear Phagocytes with Antibody-Opsonized Immunometabolic Nanoparticles.Advanced Science (Weinheim,... Dec 2023Mononuclear phagocytes (MPs) are vital components of host immune defenses against cancer. However, tumor-infiltrating MPs often present tolerogenic and pro-tumorigenic...
Mononuclear phagocytes (MPs) are vital components of host immune defenses against cancer. However, tumor-infiltrating MPs often present tolerogenic and pro-tumorigenic phenotypes via metabolic switching triggered by excessive lipid accumulation in solid tumors. Inspired by viral infection-mediated MP modulation, here enveloped immunometabolic nanoparticles (immeNPs) are designed to co-deliver a viral RNA analog and a fatty acid oxidation regulator for synergistic reshaping of intratumoral MPs. These immeNPs are camouflaged with cancer cell membranes for tumor homing and opsonized with anti-CD163 antibodies for specific MP recognition and uptake. It is found that internalized immeNPs coordinate lipid metabolic reprogramming with innate immune stimulation, inducing M2-to-M1 macrophage repolarization and tolerogenic-to-immunogenic dendritic cell differentiation for cytotoxic T cell infiltration. The authors further demonstrate that the use of immeNPs confers susceptibility to anti-PD-1 therapy in immune checkpoint blockade-resistant breast and ovarian tumors, and thereby provide a promising strategy to expand the potential of conventional immunotherapy.
Topics: Humans; T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic; Neoplasms; Antibodies; Macrophages; Nanoparticles; Lipids
PubMed: 37867225
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202303298 -
International Immunopharmacology Oct 2023Uniquely positioned as sentinel cells constantly exposed to the environment, pulmonary macrophages are vital for the maintenance of the lung lining. These cells are... (Review)
Review
Uniquely positioned as sentinel cells constantly exposed to the environment, pulmonary macrophages are vital for the maintenance of the lung lining. These cells are responsible for the clearance of xenobiotics, pathogen detection and clearance, and homeostatic functions such as surfactant recycling. Among the spectrum of phenotypes that may be expressed by macrophages in the lung, the pulmonary lipid-laden phenotype is less commonly studied in comparison to its circulatory counterpart, the atherosclerotic lesion-associated foam cell, or the acutely activated inflammatory macrophage. Herein, we propose that lipid-laden macrophage formation in the lung is governed by lipid acquisition, storage, metabolism, and export processes. The cellular balance of these four processes is critical to the maintenance of homeostasis and the prevention of aberrant signaling that may contribute to lung pathologies. This review aims to examine mechanisms and signaling pathways that are involved in lipid-laden macrophage formation and the potential consequences of this phenotype in the lung.
Topics: Macrophages; Macrophages, Alveolar; Foam Cells; Lung; Lipids
PubMed: 37595492
DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2023.110719 -
ELife Sep 2023Billions of apoptotic cells are removed daily in a human adult by professional phagocytes (e.g. macrophages) and neighboring nonprofessional phagocytes (e.g. stromal...
Billions of apoptotic cells are removed daily in a human adult by professional phagocytes (e.g. macrophages) and neighboring nonprofessional phagocytes (e.g. stromal cells). Despite being a type of professional phagocyte, neutrophils are thought to be excluded from apoptotic sites to avoid tissue inflammation. Here, we report a fundamental and unexpected role of neutrophils as the predominant phagocyte responsible for the clearance of apoptotic hepatic cells in the steady state. In contrast to the engulfment of dead cells by macrophages, neutrophils burrowed directly into apoptotic hepatocytes, a process we term , and ingested the effete cells from the inside. The depletion of neutrophils caused defective removal of apoptotic bodies, induced tissue injury in the mouse liver, and led to the generation of autoantibodies. Human autoimmune liver disease showed similar defects in the neutrophil-mediated clearance of apoptotic hepatic cells. Hence, neutrophils possess a specialized immunologically silent mechanism for the clearance of apoptotic hepatocytes through perforocytosis, and defects in this key housekeeping function of neutrophils contribute to the genesis of autoimmune liver disease.
Topics: Adult; Humans; Animals; Mice; Neutrophils; Hepatocytes; Phagocytes; Macrophages; Autoantibodies; Autoimmune Diseases
PubMed: 37728612
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.86591 -
Nature Communications Nov 2023The transcriptional and phenotypic characteristics that define alveolar monocyte and macrophage subsets in acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF) are poorly...
The transcriptional and phenotypic characteristics that define alveolar monocyte and macrophage subsets in acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF) are poorly understood. Here, we apply CITE-seq (single-cell RNA-sequencing and cell-surface protein quantification) to bronchoalveolar lavage and blood specimens longitudinally collected from participants with AHRF to identify alveolar myeloid subsets, and then validate their identity in an external cohort using flow cytometry. We identify alveolar myeloid subsets with transcriptional profiles that differ from other lung diseases as well as several subsets with similar transcriptional profiles as reported in healthy participants (Metallothionein) or patients with COVID-19 (CD163/LGMN). We use information from CITE-seq to determine cell-surface proteins that distinguish transcriptional subsets (CD14, CD163, CD123, CD71, CD48, CD86 and CD44). In the external cohort, we find a higher proportion of CD163/LGMN alveolar macrophages are associated with mortality in AHRF. We report a parsimonious set of cell-surface proteins that distinguish alveolar myeloid subsets using scalable approaches that can be applied to clinical cohorts.
Topics: Humans; Macrophages, Alveolar; Macrophages; Monocytes; Lung Diseases; Respiratory Insufficiency
PubMed: 37978185
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-43223-0 -
Blood Advances Nov 2023Tissue-resident myeloid (TRM) cells in adults have highly variable lifespans, and may be derived from early embryonic yolk sac, fetal liver, or bone marrow. Some of...
Tissue-resident myeloid (TRM) cells in adults have highly variable lifespans, and may be derived from early embryonic yolk sac, fetal liver, or bone marrow. Some of these TRM cells are known pathogenic participants in congenital and acquired diseases. Myeloablative conditioning and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation can replace long-lived brain TRM cells, resulting in clinical improvements in metabolic storage diseases. With the advent of antibody-drug conjugate (ADC)-targeted cell killing as a cell-selective means of transplant conditioning, we assessed the impact of anti-CD45-ADC on TRM cells in multiple tissues. Replacement of TRM cells ranged from 40% to 95% efficiencies in liver, lung, and skin tissues, after a single anti-CD45-ADC dose and bone marrow hematopoietic cell transfer. Of note, the population size of TRM cells in tissues returned to pretreatment levels, suggesting a regulated control of TRM cell abundance. As expected, brain microglia were not affected, but brain monocytes and macrophages were 50% replaced. Anti-CD45-ADC and adoptive cell transfer were then tested in the chronic acquired condition, atherosclerosis exacerbated by Tet2 mutant clonal hematopoiesis. Plaque-resident myeloid cells were efficiently replaced with anti-CD45-ADC and wild-type bone marrow cells. Notably, this reduced existent atherosclerotic plaque burden. Overall, these results indicate that the anti-CD45-ADC clears both hematopoietic stem and TRM cells from their niches, enabling cell replacement to achieve disease modification in a resident myeloid cell-driven disease.
Topics: Adult; Humans; Immunoconjugates; Macrophages; Monocytes; Bone Marrow; Microglia
PubMed: 37748049
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010561 -
International Journal of Molecular... Jul 2023complex causes tuberculosis (TB), a disease that causes pulmonary inflammation but can also affect other tissues. Despite macrophages having a defined role in TB... (Review)
Review
complex causes tuberculosis (TB), a disease that causes pulmonary inflammation but can also affect other tissues. Despite macrophages having a defined role in TB immunopathogenesis, other innate immune cells, such as neutrophils, are involved in this process. These cells have high phagocytic ability and a microbial-killing machine comprised of enzymes, antimicrobial peptides, and reactive oxygen species. In the last two decades, a new neutrophil immune response, the neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), has been intensely researched. NETs comprise DNA associated with histones, enzymes, and antimicrobial peptides. These structures are related to antimicrobial immune response and some immuno-pathogenesis mechanisms. This mini review highlights the role of NETs in tuberculosis and how they can be helpful as a diagnostic tool and/or therapeutic target.
Topics: Humans; Extracellular Traps; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Neutrophils; Tuberculosis; Antimicrobial Peptides
PubMed: 37511144
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241411385 -
Targeting crosstalk of STAT3 between tumor-associated M2 macrophages and Tregs in colorectal cancer.Cancer Biology & Therapy Dec 2023A comprehensive analysis of the molecular mechanism underlying colorectal tumor evaluated the development of colorectal cancer (CRC) and proposed targeting small...
A comprehensive analysis of the molecular mechanism underlying colorectal tumor evaluated the development of colorectal cancer (CRC) and proposed targeting small molecular inhibitors. Nonetheless, the adoptive resistance of these therapies remains a challenge with respect to achieving an effective clinical response. Thus, identifying the molecular mechanisms guiding CRC growth is essential. The results of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) dataset analysis demonstrated a critical role of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) pathway in tumor immune suppression via modulation of the recruitment of Treg cells and M2 type tumor-associated macrophages. The experiments elucidate that targeting STAT3 pathways markedly reduce the proportions of TAMs and Tregs by inhibiting tumor progression. These findings revealed crosstalk between Treg cells and M2 macrophages, proving a potential therapeutic strategy for CRC therapy. Combinatorial treatment with STAT3 inhibitor and programmed death 1 (PD-1) antibody therapy effectively prevents CRC tumor growth in a mouse model with high anti-tumor immunity. In summary, targeting STAT3 disrupts the interaction between Treg cells and M2 macrophages and improves the anti-tumor response in CRC, thereby offering a promising strategy to treat patients with CRC.
Topics: Animals; Mice; Tumor-Associated Macrophages; STAT3 Transcription Factor; Macrophages; Colorectal Neoplasms; Disease Models, Animal
PubMed: 37381162
DOI: 10.1080/15384047.2023.2226418 -
Current Topics in Developmental Biology 2024During development, macrophage subpopulations derived from hematopoietic progenitors take up residence in the developing heart. Embryonic macrophages are detectable at... (Review)
Review
During development, macrophage subpopulations derived from hematopoietic progenitors take up residence in the developing heart. Embryonic macrophages are detectable at the early stages of heart formation in the nascent myocardium, valves and coronary vasculature. The specific subtypes of macrophages present in the developing heart reflect the generation of hematopoietic progenitors in the yolk sac, aorta-gonad-mesonephros, fetal liver, and postnatal bone marrow. Ablation studies have demonstrated specific requirements for embryonic macrophages in valve remodeling, coronary and lymphatic vessel development, specialized conduction system maturation, and myocardial regeneration after neonatal injury. The developmental origins of macrophage lineages change over time, with embryonic lineages having more reparative and remodeling functions in comparison to the bone marrow derived myeloid lineages of adults. Here we review the contributions and functions of cardiac macrophages in the developing heart with potential regenerative and reparative implications for cardiovascular disease.
Topics: Macrophages; Heart; Myocardium
PubMed: 38556420
DOI: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2024.01.004