CXCL10缺乏限制巨噬细胞浸润,保留肺基质,促进支气管肺发育不良患者肺生长。

Dharmesh V Hirani, Florian Thielen, Siavash Mansouri, Soula Danopoulos, Christina Vohlen, Pinar Haznedar-Karakaya, Jasmine Mohr, Rebecca Wilke, Jaco Selle, Thomas Grosch, Ivana Mizik, Margarete Odenthal, Cristina M Alvira, Celien Kuiper-Makris, Gloria S Pryhuber, Christian Pallasch, S van Koningsbruggen-Rietschel, Denise Al-Alam, Werner Seeger, Rajkumar Savai, Jörg Dötsch, Miguel A Alejandre Alcazar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

补充氧气的早产儿患支气管肺发育不良(BPD)的风险很高,这是一种新生儿慢性肺病。巨噬细胞活化的炎症是BPD发病机制的核心。CXCL10是一种趋化性和促炎性趋化因子,在患有BPD的婴儿肺部和小鼠中基于高氧的BPD中升高。在这里,我们测试了CXCL10缺乏是否通过阻止巨噬细胞活化来保护新生儿高氧后的肺部生长。为此,我们将Cxcl10敲除(Cxcl10-/-)和野生型小鼠暴露于高氧(85%O2)诱导的新生儿肺损伤和随后再生的实验模型中。此外,用CXCL10和/或CXCR3拮抗剂处理培养的原代人巨噬细胞和鼠巨噬细胞(J744A.1)。我们的转录组学分析确定CXCL10是高氧后新生小鼠肺部炎症网络的中心枢纽。定量组织形态计量学分析显示,Cxcl10-/-小鼠在一定程度上免受肺泡减少的影响。这些发现与Cxcl10-/-小鼠在急性损伤和再生过程中保留的弹性纤维的空间分布、减少的胶原沉积以及防止巨噬细胞募集/渗透到肺部有关。此外,对培养的人和小鼠巨噬细胞的研究表明,高氧诱导Cxcl10的表达,进而触发巨噬细胞通过CXCR3的M1样激活和迁移。最后,我们证明了患有BPD的婴儿肺部巨噬细胞相关CXCL10的时间增加。总之,我们的数据表明,在实验和临床BPD中,巨噬细胞衍生的CXCL10通过CXCR3驱动巨噬细胞趋化,导致促纤维化肺重塑和肺泡化停滞。因此,靶向CXCL10-CXCR3轴可以为BPD提供一种新的治疗途径。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

CXCL10 deficiency limits macrophage infiltration, preserves lung matrix, and enables lung growth in bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

CXCL10 deficiency limits macrophage infiltration, preserves lung matrix, and enables lung growth in bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

CXCL10 deficiency limits macrophage infiltration, preserves lung matrix, and enables lung growth in bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

CXCL10 deficiency limits macrophage infiltration, preserves lung matrix, and enables lung growth in bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

Preterm infants with oxygen supplementation are at high risk for bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a neonatal chronic lung disease. Inflammation with macrophage activation is central to the pathogenesis of BPD. CXCL10, a chemotactic and pro-inflammatory chemokine, is elevated in the lungs of infants evolving BPD and in hyperoxia-based BPD in mice. Here, we tested if CXCL10 deficiency preserves lung growth after neonatal hyperoxia by preventing macrophage activation. To this end, we exposed Cxcl10 knockout (Cxcl10-/-) and wild-type mice to an experimental model of hyperoxia (85% O2)-induced neonatal lung injury and subsequent regeneration. In addition, cultured primary human macrophages and murine macrophages (J744A.1) were treated with CXCL10 and/or CXCR3 antagonist. Our transcriptomic analysis identified CXCL10 as a central hub in the inflammatory network of neonatal mouse lungs after hyperoxia. Quantitative histomorphometric analysis revealed that Cxcl10-/- mice are in part protected from reduced alveolar. These findings were related to the preserved spatial distribution of elastic fibers, reduced collagen deposition, and protection from macrophage recruitment/infiltration to the lungs in Cxcl10-/- mice during acute injury and regeneration. Complimentary, studies with cultured human and murine macrophages showed that hyperoxia induces Cxcl10 expression that in turn triggers M1-like activation and migration of macrophages through CXCR3. Finally, we demonstrated a temporal increase of macrophage-related CXCL10 in the lungs of infants with BPD. In conclusion, our data demonstrate macrophage-derived CXCL10 in experimental and clinical BPD that drives macrophage chemotaxis through CXCR3, causing pro-fibrotic lung remodeling and arrest of alveolarization. Thus, targeting the CXCL10-CXCR3 axis could offer a new therapeutic avenue for BPD.

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