Macrophage Activation for Tumor Cytotoxicity: Reactivity of Peritoneal and Bone Marrow Macrophages

Author(s):  
Luigi P. Ruco ◽  
Monte S. Meltzer ◽  
Edward J. Leonard ◽  
Shogo Tomisawa ◽  
A. Mantovani
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liyan Wan ◽  
Yuting Gao ◽  
Jieyu Gu ◽  
Huihui Chi ◽  
Zhihong Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background To investigate the potential utility of quantitative parameters obtained by 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) in the assessment of disease severity and the occurrence of macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) in adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD). Methods Fifty-seven patients with AOSD who underwent pre-treatment 18F-FDG PET/CT were recruited in this study and compared with 60 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Clinical features and laboratory data were recorded. The systemic score was assessed to determine the disease severity. The maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax), metabolic lesion volume (MLV), and total lesion glycolysis (TLG) were used to evaluate the involved organs and tissues that abnormally accumulated 18F-FDG. Multivariate analysis was performed to identify the PET/CT-derived risk factors contributing to the AOSD-related MAS, and their diagnostic efficiency was evaluated. Results High 18F-FDG accumulation was observed in the bone marrow (SUVmax median, 5.10), spleen (SUVmax median, 3.70), and lymph nodes (LNs, SUVmax median, 5.55). The SUVmax of the bone marrow (rho = 0.376, p = 0.004), SUVmax of the spleen (rho = 0.450, p < 0.001), TLGtotal of LNs (rho = 0.386, p = 0.017), and MLVtotal of LNs (rho = 0.391, p = 0.015) were correlated with the systemic score. The SUVmax of the spleen (p = 0.017), TLGtotal of LNs (p = 0.045), and MLVtotal of LNs (p = 0.012) were higher in patients with MAS than in those without MAS. A MLVtotal of LNs > 62.2 (OR 27.375, p = 0.042) was an independent predictive factor for MAS with a sensitivity of 80.0% and a specificity of 93.9%. Conclusions The glucose metabolic level of the spleen could be an effective and easy-to-use imaging indicator of disease severity, and MLVtotal of LNs > 62.2 was a strong predictor of MAS occurrence in patients with AOSD.


1984 ◽  
pp. 127-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
William J. Johnson ◽  
Scott D. Somers ◽  
Dolph O. Adams

1989 ◽  
Vol 370 (1) ◽  
pp. 575-582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra HOFFMANN ◽  
Karl-Heinz WIESMÜLLER ◽  
Jörg METZGER ◽  
Günther JUNG ◽  
Wolfgang G. BESSLER

Pathology ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey M. Forbes ◽  
Robert Horne ◽  
Wendy N. Erber ◽  
Brendan J. Collins ◽  
John M. Papadimitriou

1989 ◽  
Vol 169 (3) ◽  
pp. 1021-1029 ◽  
Author(s):  
J E Albina ◽  
M D Caldwell ◽  
W L Henry ◽  
C D Mills

Sites of inflammation with prominent macrophage infiltration, such as wounds and certain tumors, are uniquely deficient in free arginine. The effects of arginine availability on macrophage physiology were investigated. When cultured in media containing less than 0.1 mM L-arginine, rat resident peritoneal macrophages exhibited enhanced spreading, tumor cytotoxicity, superoxide production, phagocytosis, and protein synthesis. Thus, arginine concentrations similar to those found in sites of inflammation can augment macrophage functions, while those found in plasma (approximately 0.1 mM) and in commonly used culture media (0.4 to 1.2 mM) are inhibitory. Culture in homoarginine, but not D-arginine, ornithine, citrulline, urea, histidine, or lysine also inhibited macrophage tumor cytotoxicity, indicating the specificity of the effect. In contrast to resident macrophages, the tumor cytotoxicity of peritoneal macrophages obtained after C. parvum injection was suppressed by culture in arginine-deficient media. However, L-arginine-deficient media enhanced all other activation-associated functions in C. parvum-elicited macrophages as in resident cells. Arginine-free wound fluid promoted resident macrophage tumoricidal activity when compared with rat serum, and again, the addition of L-arginine was inhibitory. The marked effects of L-arginine availability on macrophage functions, together with the knowledge that these cells modify the extracellular arginine concentration in sites of inflammation through arginase, provide evidence for an autoregulatory mechanism of macrophage activation.


2020 ◽  
pp. annrheumdis-2020-217470
Author(s):  
Grant S Schulert ◽  
Alex V Pickering ◽  
Thuy Do ◽  
Sanjeev Dhakal ◽  
Ndate Fall ◽  
...  

ObjectivesSystemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) confers high risk for macrophage activation syndrome (MAS), a life-threatening cytokine storm driven by interferon (IFN)-γ. SJIA monocytes display IFN-γ hyper-responsiveness, but the molecular basis of this remains unclear. The objective of this study is to identify circulating monocyte and bone marrow macrophage (BMM) polarisation phenotypes in SJIA including molecular features contributing to IFN response.MethodsBulk RNA-seq was performed on peripheral blood monocytes (n=26 SJIA patients) and single cell (sc) RNA-seq was performed on BMM (n=1). Cultured macrophages were used to define consequences of tripartite motif containing 8 (TRIM8) knockdown on IFN-γ signalling.ResultsBulk RNA-seq of SJIA monocytes revealed marked transcriptional changes in patients with elevated ferritin levels. We identified substantial overlap with multiple polarisation states but little evidence of IFN-induced signature. Interestingly, among the most highly upregulated genes was TRIM8, a positive regulator of IFN-γ signalling. In contrast to PBMC from SJIA patients without MAS, scRNA-seq of BMM from a patient with SJIA and MAS identified distinct subpopulations of BMM with altered transcriptomes, including upregulated IFN-γ response pathways. These BMM also showed significantly increased expression of TRIM8. In vitro knockdown of TRIM8 in macrophages significantly reduced IFN-γ responsiveness.ConclusionsMacrophages with an ‘IFN-γ response’ phenotype and TRIM8 overexpression were expanded in the bone marrow from an MAS patient. TRIM8 is also upregulated in SJIA monocytes, and augments macrophage IFN-γ response in vitro, providing both a candidate molecular mechanism and potential therapeutic target for monocyte hyper-responsiveness to IFNγ in cytokine storms including MAS.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Allison Paine ◽  
Tadashi Miya ◽  
Brandon J. Webb

Abstract Q fever is an uncommon but likely underreported zoonotic infection. Severe hyperferritinemia has been associated with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and other infectious diseases. In this study, we report a case of Coxiella burnetii infection in an asplenic patient complicated by severe hyperferritinemia and bone marrow infiltration. In this case, the marked ferritin elevation may have been an indicator of profound systemic macrophage activation due to preferential intracellular infection of this cell type by C burnetii, perhaps exacerbated by altered mononuclear phagocyte system function in the setting of asplenia.


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