Spleen-derived classical monocytes mediate lung ischemia-reperfusion injury through IL-1β

Hsi-Min Hsiao(Washington University in St. Louis), Ramiro Fernandez(Northwestern University), Satona Tanaka(Washington University in St. Louis), Wenjun Li(Washington University in St. Louis), Jessica Spahn(Washington University in St. Louis), Stephen Chiu(Northwestern University), Mahzad Akbarpour(Northwestern University), Pablo D. Pérez(Washington University in St. Louis), Qiang Wu(Northwestern University), Cem Turam(Washington University in St. Louis), Davide Scozzi(Washington University in St. Louis), Tsuyoshi Takahashi(Washington University in St. Louis), Hannah Luehmann(Washington University in St. Louis), Varun Puri(Washington University in St. Louis), G. R. Scott Budinger(Northwestern University), Alexander S. Krupnick(University of Virginia), Alexander V. Misharin(Northwestern University), Kory J. Lavine, Yongjian Liu(Washington University in St. Louis), Andrew E. Gelman(Washington University in St. Louis), Ankit Bharat(Northwestern University), Daniel Kreisel(Washington University in St. Louis)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
May 20, 2018
Cited by 89Open Access
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Abstract

Ischemia-reperfusion injury, a form of sterile inflammation, is the leading risk factor for both short-term mortality following pulmonary transplantation and chronic lung allograft dysfunction. While it is well recognized that neutrophils are critical mediators of acute lung injury, processes that guide their entry into pulmonary tissue are not well understood. Here, we found that CCR2+ classical monocytes are necessary and sufficient for mediating extravasation of neutrophils into pulmonary tissue during ischemia-reperfusion injury following hilar clamping or lung transplantation. The classical monocytes were mobilized from the host spleen, and splenectomy attenuated the recruitment of classical monocytes as well as the entry of neutrophils into injured lung tissue, which was associated with improved graft function. Neutrophil extravasation was mediated by MyD88-dependent IL-1β production by graft-infiltrating classical monocytes, which downregulated the expression of the tight junction-associated protein ZO-2 in pulmonary vascular endothelial cells. Thus, we have uncovered a crucial role for classical monocytes, mobilized from the spleen, in mediating neutrophil extravasation, with potential implications for targeting of recipient classical monocytes to ameliorate pulmonary ischemia-reperfusion injury in the clinic.


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