scholarly journals Adipocyte death triggers a pro-inflammatory response and induces metabolic activation of resident macrophages

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreas Lindhorst ◽  
Nora Raulien ◽  
Peter Wieghofer ◽  
Jens Eilers ◽  
Fabio M. V. Rossi ◽  
...  

AbstractA chronic low-grade inflammation within adipose tissue (AT) seems to be the link between obesity and some of its associated diseases. One hallmark of this AT inflammation is the accumulation of AT macrophages (ATMs) around dead or dying adipocytes, forming so-called crown-like structures (CLS). To investigate the dynamics of CLS and their direct impact on the activation state of ATMs, we established a laser injury model to deplete individual adipocytes in living AT from double reporter mice (GFP-labeled ATMs and tdTomato-labeled adipocytes). Hence, we were able to detect early ATM-adipocyte interactions by live imaging and to determine a precise timeline for CLS formation after adipocyte death. Further, our data indicate metabolic activation and increased lipid metabolism in ATMs upon forming CLS. Most importantly, adipocyte death, even in lean animals under homeostatic conditions, leads to a locally confined inflammation, which is in sharp contrast to other tissues. We identified cell size as cause for the described pro-inflammatory response, as the size of adipocytes is above a critical threshold size for efferocytosis, a process for anti-inflammatory removal of dead cells during tissue homeostasis. Finally, experiments on parabiotic mice verified that adipocyte death leads to a pro-inflammatory response of resident ATMs in vivo, without significant recruitment of blood monocytes. Our data indicate that adipocyte death triggers a unique degradation process and locally induces a metabolically activated ATM phenotype that is globally observed with obesity.

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (15) ◽  
pp. e33-e44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asif J. Iqbal ◽  
Eileen McNeill ◽  
Theodore S. Kapellos ◽  
Daniel Regan-Komito ◽  
Sophie Norman ◽  
...  

Key Points CD68-GFP reporter mice show GFP transgene expression in both monocytes and tissue resident macrophage populations. Adoptively transferred CD68-GFP monocytes maintain GFP expression after recruitment in an ongoing inflammatory response.


1987 ◽  
Vol 166 (4) ◽  
pp. 909-922 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Sluiter ◽  
E Hulsing-Hesselink ◽  
I Elzenga-Claasen ◽  
L W van Hemsbergen-Oomens ◽  
A van der Voort van der Kleij-van Andel ◽  
...  

Earlier investigations had indicated that the factor increasing monocytopoiesis (FIM), present in the serum of mice and rabbits during the onset of an inflammatory response, is released by cells of the inflammatory exudate. The present study was performed to determine which cells produce and secrete this factor and to establish the kinetics of its production and secretion. FIM was assayed in vivo by intravenous injection of samples into untreated mice and monitoring the course of the number of blood monocytes in the recipients. FIM was assayed in vitro by adding samples to cultures of the macrophage cell line PU5 and determining the rate of proliferation of the cells. The results show that only macrophages contain and synthesize FIM. This factor is secreted upon exposure to a phagocytic stimulus, and after the release of preformed FIM, macrophages secrete newly synthesized FIM. Granulocytes and lymphocytes neither contain nor secrete FIM. The characteristics of FIM derived from macrophages are in all aspects similar to those of FIM in serum. Macrophage-derived FIM is a protein with a molecular weight between 10 and 25 X 10(3), its activity is cell-lineage specific and dose dependent, and it stimulates monocyte production in the bone marrow. Macrophage-derived FIM is not identical to either CSF-1 or IL-1, and has no chemotactic activity. Taken together, the present results show that FIM occurring in serum during an inflammatory response originates from macrophages at the site of the inflammation. In this way the macrophages themselves regulate the supply of circulating blood monocytes that can migrate to the site of injury when needed.


Planta Medica ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 81 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S1-S381
Author(s):  
YC Oh ◽  
YH Jeong ◽  
WK Cho ◽  
SJ Lee ◽  
JY Ma

1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (02) ◽  
pp. 673-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
C E Dempfle ◽  
S A Pfitzner ◽  
M Dollman ◽  
K Huck ◽  
G Stehle ◽  
...  

SummaryVarious assays have been developed for quantitation of soluble fibrin or fibrin monomer in clinical plasma samples, since this parameter directly reflects in vivo thrombin action on fibrinogen. Using plasma samples from healthy blood donors, patients with cerebral ischemic insult, patients with septicemia, and patients with venous thrombosis, we compared two immunologic tests using monoclonal antibodies against fibrin-specific neo-epitopes, and two functional tests based on the cofactor activity of soluble fibrin complexes in tPA-induced plasminogen activation. Test A (Enzymun®-Test FM) showed the best discriminating power among normal range and pathological samples. Test B (Fibrinostika® soluble fibrin) clearly separated normal range from pathological samples, but failed to discriminate among samples from patients with low grade coagulation activation in septicemia, and massive activation in venous thrombosis. Functional test C (Fibrin monomer test Behring) displayed good discriminating power between normal and pathological range samples, and correlated with test A (r = 0.61), whereas assay D (Coa-Set® Fibrin monomer) showed little discriminating power at values below 10 μg/ml and little correlation with other assays. Standardization of assays will require further characterization of analytes detected.


1966 ◽  
Vol 123 (2) ◽  
pp. 309-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Marilyn Smart ◽  
Edwin D. Kilbourne

A comparative study was undertaken of the pathogenesis of infection of the allantoic sac of the chick embryo with three influenza viruses of differing virulence, and of the influence of hydrocortisone on the course of infection. Judged on the basis of earlier onset and greater degree of inflammatory response and diminished survival time of infected embryos, Mel. and Lee viruses were markedly more virulent than PR8, despite the earlier appearance of virus in PR8-infected embryos. Interferon appeared first and in greater quantity in the allantoic fluid of Lee-infected embryos and latest with PR8 infection. Thus, there was no correlation of avirulence and better interferon production with the viruses under study in the present system. Furthermore, evidence obtained suggested that Lee virus ("virulent") was most susceptible to interferon action, and also that viral synthesis in the chorioallantoic membrane with PR8 ("avirulent") persisted after the appearance of interferon. The injection of hydrocortisone within 2 hr of the initiation of infection delayed the synthesis of all three viruses; had no significant effect upon the inflammatory response; and transiently inhibited the synthesis of interferon, while prolonging the survival of Lee- and Mel.-infected embryos. Late administration of hydrocortisone suppresses both the inflammatory response and the production of interferon. Only in the case of Lee virus infection did hydrocortisone administration lead to augmentation of final yields of virus with the low infection multiplicity employed in the present experiments. It is postulated that Lee virus is a better inducer of interferon because its infectivity in vivo is more rapidly inactivated. As a consequence synthesis of Lee virus is more under the control of endogenous interferon than is the case with PR8 or Mel. virus. Therefore, inhibition of interferon synthesis with hydrocortisone has a greater influence on final yields of Lee virus.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2530
Author(s):  
Bijean D. Ford ◽  
Diego Moncada Giraldo ◽  
Camilla Margaroli ◽  
Vincent D. Giacalone ◽  
Milton R. Brown ◽  
...  

Cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease is dominated by the recruitment of myeloid cells (neutrophils and monocytes) from the blood which fail to clear the lung of colonizing microbes. In prior in vitro studies, we showed that blood neutrophils migrated through the well-differentiated lung epithelium into the CF airway fluid supernatant (ASN) mimic the dysfunction of CF airway neutrophils in vivo, including decreased bactericidal activity despite an increased metabolism. Here, we hypothesized that, in a similar manner to neutrophils, blood monocytes undergo significant adaptations upon recruitment to CFASN. To test this hypothesis, primary human blood monocytes were transmigrated in our in vitro model into the ASN from healthy control (HC) or CF subjects to mimic in vivo recruitment to normal or CF airways, respectively. Surface phenotype, metabolic and bacterial killing activities, and transcriptomic profile by RNA sequencing were quantified post-transmigration. Unlike neutrophils, monocytes were not metabolically activated, nor did they show broad differences in activation and scavenger receptor expression upon recruitment to the CFASN compared to HCASN. However, monocytes recruited to CFASN showed decreased bactericidal activity. RNASeq analysis showed strong effects of transmigration on monocyte RNA profile, with differences between CFASN and HCASN conditions, notably in immune signaling, including lower expression in the former of the antimicrobial factor ISG15, defensin-like chemokine CXCL11, and nitric oxide-producing enzyme NOS3. While monocytes undergo qualitatively different adaptations from those seen in neutrophils upon recruitment to the CF airway microenvironment, their bactericidal activity is also dysregulated, which could explain why they also fail to protect CF airways from infection.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 126-127
Author(s):  
Marta Zampino ◽  
Luigi Ferrucci ◽  
Richard Spencer ◽  
Kenneth Fishbein ◽  
Eleanor Simonsick ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic low-grade inflammation often occurs with aging and has been associated with negative health outcomes. Despite extensive research on the origins of “inflammaging”, the causative mechanisms remain unclear. However, a connection between poor mitochondrial health and chronic inflammation has been hypothesized, with decreasing mitochondrial function occurring with age and precipitating an increase in reactive oxygen species and other pro-inflammatory macromolecules such as mitochondrial DNA. We tested this hypothesis on a population of 619 subjects from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, measuring muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity in vivo by phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (P-MRS), and plasma interleukin (IL)-6, the most widely used biomarker of inflammaging. The P-MRS-derived post-exercise phosphocreatine recovery time constant tau-PCr, a measure of oxidative capacity, was expressed as a categorical variable through assignment to quintiles. Participants in the first quintile of tau-PCr (best mitochondrial function) were taken as reference and compared to the others using linear regression analysis adjusted for sex, age, lean and fat body mass, and physical activity. Those participants with the lowest oxidative capacity had significantly higher log(IL-6) levels as compared to the reference group. However, data from the other quintiles was not significantly different from the reference values. In conclusion, severe impairment of oxidative capacity is associated with increased inflammation. This study design does not provide conclusive evidence of whether increased inflammation and impaired bioenergetic recovery are both caused by underlying poor health status, or whether mitochondrial deficits lead directly to the observed inflammation; we anticipate addressing this important question with longitudinal studies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii294-iii295
Author(s):  
Jovana Pavisic ◽  
Chankrit Sethi ◽  
Chris Jones ◽  
Stergios Zacharoulis ◽  
Andrea Califano

Abstract Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) remains a fatal disease with no effective drugs to date. Mutation-based precision oncology approaches are limited by lack of targetable mutations and genetic heterogeneity. We leveraged systems biology methodologies to discover common targetable disease drivers—master regulator proteins (MRs)—in DIPG to expand treatment options. Using the metaVIPER algorithm, we interrogated an integrated low grade glioma and GBM gene regulatory network with 31 DIPG-gene expression signatures to identify tumor-specific MRs by differential expression of their transcriptional targets. Unsupervised clustering identified MR signatures of upregulated activity in RRM2/TOP2A in 13 patients, CD3D in 5 patients, and MMP7, TACSTD2, RAC2 and SLC15A1/SLC34A2 in individual patients, all of which can be targeted. Notably, intratumoral administration of etoposide by convection enhanced delivery was effective in murine proneural gliomas in which TOP2 was identified as a MR while RRM2—targetable by drugs such as cladribine—has been shown to be a positive regulator of glioma progression whose knock-down inhibits tumor growth. We also prioritized drugs by their ability to reverse MR-activity signatures using a large drug-perturbation database. Patients clustered by predicted drug sensitivities with distinct groups of tumors predicted to respond to proteasome inhibitors, Thiotepa or Volasertib all of which have early evidence in treating gliomas. We will refine this analysis in a multi-institutional study of >100 patient gene expression profiles to define MR signatures driving known biological/molecular disease subtypes, use DIPG cell lines recapitulating common MR architectures to optimize therapy prioritization, and validate our findings in vivo.


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