Normally, neutrophil pools are maintained by homeostatic mechanisms that require the transcription factor C/EBPα. Inflammation, however, induces neutrophilia through a distinct pathway of "emergency" granulopoiesis that is dependent on C/EBPβ. Here, we show in mice that alum triggers emergency granulopoiesis through the IL-1RI-dependent induction of G-CSF. G-CSF/G-CSF-R neutralization impairs proliferative responses of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) to alum, but also abrogates the acute mobilization of BM neutrophils, raising the possibility that HSPC responses to inflammation are an indirect result of the exhaustion of BM neutrophil stores. The induction of neutropenia, via depletion with Gr-1 mAb or myeloid-specific ablation of Mcl-1, elicits G-CSF via an IL-1RI-independent pathway, stimulating granulopoietic responses indistinguishable from those induced by adjuvant. Notably, C/EBPβ, thought to be necessary for enhanced generative capacity of BM, is dispensable for increased proliferation of HSPC to alum or neutropenia, but plays a role in terminal neutrophil differentiation during granulopoietic recovery. We conclude that alum elicits a transient increase in G-CSF production via IL-1RI for the mobilization of BM neutrophils, but density-dependent feedback sustains G-CSF for accelerated granulopoiesis.
Normally, neutrophil pools are maintained by homeostatic mechanisms that require the transcription factor C/EBPα. Inflammation, however, induces neutrophilia through a distinct pathway of "emergency" granulopoiesis that is dependent on C/EBPβ. Here, we show in mice that alum triggers emergency granulopoiesis through the IL-1RI-dependent induction of G-CSF. G-CSF/G-CSF-R neutralization impairs proliferative responses of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) to alum, but also abrogates the acute mobilization of BM neutrophils, raising the possibility that HSPC responses to inflammation are an indirect result of the exhaustion of BM neutrophil stores. The induction of neutropenia, via depletion with Gr-1 mAb or myeloid-specific ablation of Mcl-1, elicits G-CSF via an IL-1RI-independent pathway, stimulating granulopoietic responses indistinguishable from those induced by adjuvant. Notably, C/EBPβ, thought to be necessary for enhanced generative capacity of BM, is dispensable for increased proliferation of HSPC to alum or neutropenia, but plays a role in terminal neutrophil differentiation during granulopoietic recovery. We conclude that alum elicits a transient increase in G-CSF production via IL-1RI for the mobilization of BM neutrophils, but density-dependent feedback sustains G-CSF for accelerated granulopoiesis.
C/EBPα and -β play critical roles in regulating the tempo of granulopoiesis.
Neutrophil pools in the blood and BM are normally maintained by a granulopoietic
process dependent on the C/EBPα transcription factor [1], [2]. In contrast, inflammation
accelerates granulopoiesis and induces neutrophilia by a distinct form of
granulopoiesis acting through a C/EBPβ-dependent pathway [2], [3]. C/EBPβ is thought to
facilitate proliferation by myeloid progenitor cells in response to inflammatory
growth factors [2],
but the extracellular signals that stimulate neutrophil production during
inflammatory responses are unclear.Mice with a conditional deletion of C/EBPα fail to produce neutrophils due to
defective generation of granulocyte/macrophage progenitors (GMP) from common myeloid
progenitors (CMP) [4]. Granulopoiesis can be rescued in
C/EBPα−/− mice by exogenous GM-CSF or IL-3 [2], or by the
expression of C/EBPβ from the C/EBPα locus [5].
C/EBPβ−/− mice, in contrast, exhibit normal numbers
of neutrophils in the steady-state, but fail to mount neutrophilias in response to
infection or cytokine treatment, implicating C/EBPβ as a regulator of emergency
granulopoiesis [2].
Growth factors elicited during infections are thought to reduce C/EBPα
expression in GMP while increasing C/EBPβ expression, and thereby focusing
differentiation towards neutrophils while elevating rates of proliferation [2]. The model that
has emerged from these observations is that C/EBPα and C/EBPβ control
distinct pathways of steady-state and emergency granulopoiesis, respectively.While neutrophilias are commonly associated with inflammation, it is generally
thought that granulopoiesis is a dynamic process that also responds to
non-inflammatory cues elicited through feedback. Evidence for feedback mechanisms of
granulopoiesis was first provided in studies showing that animals rendered
neutropenic via leukapheresis [6], neutrophil anti-serum [7], or irradiation [8] exhibited
expansions of myeloid precursor populations in BM prior to the recovery of mature
neutrophil compartments. In patients with cyclic neutropenia, the periodic
oscillations in blood neutrophil counts are thought to result from dysfunctional
feedback regulation of granulopoiesis [9]. Numerous models for granulopoietic regulation have been
proposed and most contain a feedback component that links the population density of
neutrophils to the proliferation and differentiation of neutrophil precursors [10], [11], [12], [13]. The mechanisms
of feedback are still debated, however, and the roles of C/EBPα and C/EBPβ
in the active regulation of granulopoiesis have not been addressed.Several cytokines can modulate neutrophil production, but G-CSF is the primary
regulator of steady-state and emergency granulopoiesis (reviewed in [14]). In
addition to regulating neutrophil output, signaling through G-CSF and G-CSF receptor
(G-CSF-R) also controls neutrophil survival, function, and egress from BM [15], [16], [17]. Consequently,
mice lacking G-CSF or G-CSF-R are severely neutropenic [15], [16]. G-CSF-independent pathways of
granulopoiesis exist, however, as mature neutrophils are present in both
G-CSF−/− and G-CSF-R−/− mice,
albeit in lower numbers [15], [16]. Furthermore, G-CSF is dispensable for the inflammatory
neutrophilia elicited by fungal infection [18], indicative of a compensatory
signal(s) that enhances granulopoiesis in response to pathogens. Candidate factors
for the inflammatory induction of granulopoiesis include GM-CSF, IL-3, and IL-6
[19], [20], [21], [22]. Microbial
products may also enhance myelopoiesis directly, as TLR ligation on HSPC induces
proliferation and myeloid differentiation in vitro
[23].Recently, we demonstrated that the sterile adjuvant alum induces emergency
granulopoiesis by increasing the proliferation of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC),
multipotent progenitors (MPP), and granulocyte/macrophage progenitors (GMP). In
IL-1RI−/− mice, alum does not increase the proliferation
of HSPC [3].
However, the IL-1RI sensitive compartment in these mice is not HSPC but a
radiation-resistant cell population that is not transferred by hematopoietic
reconstitution [3].
Therefore, IL-1RI signaling must elicit another factor that activates HSPC for
accelerated neutrophil production.Here, we show that alum rapidly elicits G-CSF via IL-1RI-dependent signals.
Interference with G-CSF/G-CSF-R abrogated the inflammatory mobilization of BM
neutrophils and increases in HSPC proliferation, raising the possibility that
increased HSPC proliferation is an indirect effect of reduced BM neutrophil numbers.
Indeed, in vivo depletions of neutrophils stimulated HSPC
proliferation and emergency granulopoiesis as well as alum. We conclude that
inflammation rapidly induces G-CSF for the mobilization of BM neutrophils, but the
resulting BM neutropenia triggers increases in HSPC proliferation through a
density-dependent feedback mechanism. Notably, the transcription factor C/EBPβ,
thought to be necessary for enhancing the generative capacity of bone marrow, is
dispensable for increased proliferation of HSPC but plays a role in terminal
neutrophil differentiation during granulopoietic recovery from neutropenia. These
observations reveal the BM neutrophil population density as a key regulator of
neutrophil production; inflammation mobilizes BM neutrophils, effecting neutropenia
which, in turn, activates a density-dependent feedback mechanism for increased HSPC
proliferation and focused neutrophil production.
Materials and Methods
Ethics Statement
All studies were approved by the Duke University Institutional Animal Care and
Use Committee (permit number 240-08-09), and every effort was taken to minimize
animal suffering.
Mice
C57BL/6, congenic IL-1RI−/− mice
(B6.129S7-Il1r1tm1Imx/J [24]), and
RAG1−/− mice (B6.129S7-Rag1tm1Mom/J[25]) were
from Jackson Laboratories. Dr. Y. Yang (Duke University) provided
MyD88−/− mice [26].
C1q−/− mice [27] were obtained from Dr. M.
Walport (Imperial College). C3−/− mice [28] and FcR
common γ chain deficient mice (FcRγ−/−
[29]) were
provided by Dr. T. F. Tedder (Duke University). LysMCre/wt
Mcl-1f/f and LysMwt/wt Mcl-1f/f mice [30] were
provided by Dr. Y. He (Duke University). C/EBPβ hemizygous mice on 129/Sv
and BL/6 background strains were provided by Dr. Peter Johnson (NCI);
C/EBPβ−/− mice and control littermates were
generated by intercrossing hemizygous 129/Sv and BL/6 parents. Bone marrow cells
from CX3CR1GFP/+ mice [31] were provided by Dr. M.D.
Gunn (Duke University). G-CSF-R−/− mice [16] were provided
by Dr. D. Link (Washington University). All mice were housed in specific
pathogen-free conditions at the Duke University Animal Care Facility with
sterile bedding, water, and food; MyD88−/− mice were
provided with antibiotic in water.
Purification of Gr-1 mAb
Gr-1 mAb [32]
was purified from serum-free supernatants using a HiTrap Protein G column (GE
Healthcare) and dialyzed in sterile PBS.
Injection of adjuvant and purified proteins
Mice were immunized i.p. with chicken γ-globulin (CGG)
conjugated to (4-hydroxy 3-nitrophenyl)acetyl (NP) (NP9-11-CGG)
precipitated in alum [33]. Purified Gr-1 mAb or anti-Ly-6G mAb (100 µg,
clone 1A8, Biolegend) was diluted to 200 µl in PBS and injected
i.p. To neutralize G-CSF in vivo, mice
were injected i.v. with 100 µg anti-mouseGCSF (R&D
Systems, clone 67604) 30 minutes before immunization or Gr-1 injection.
Flow Cytometry
FITC-, PE-, PE-Cy5-, APC-, APC-Cy7 or APC-eFluor 780, PE-Texas Red-, PE-Cy7-, and
biotin-conjugated antibodies to Ly-6G (clone 1A8), Gr-1, CD11b, Ter119, CD4,
CD8, B220, TCRβ, Ly-6C, CD31, CD34, c-Kit, Sca-1, FcγRII/III, and Flt3
were from BD Pharmingen or eBioscience. PE-conjugated Ly-6B mAb was obtained
from AbD Serotec and FITC-conjugated anti-CCR3 was obtained from R&D
Systems.Mice were bled via the retro-orbital sinus and blood was collected in heparin
solution. Femurs and tibiae from both legs were harvested. BM was flushed out
with cold IMDM containing 2% FBS. Erythrocytes were lysed in ammonium
chloride buffer. Single-cell suspensions were labeled with combinations of
fluorochrome-antibody conjugates; propidium iodide (Sigma-Aldrich) identified
dead cells.As injected Gr-1 mAb reduced levels of ex vivo labeling with
fluorochrome-Gr-1 conjugates, Gr-1+ cells were routinely
identified by the following procedure. In a first round of labeling, cells were
exposed to unconjugated Gr-1, washed, and saturated with FITC-conjugated
anti-rat IgG (Southern Biotech). This method ensured the identification of all
Gr-1+ cells, whether labeled in vivo or
ex vivo. After washing, labeling with other antibody
conjugates was carried out in a second round of staining.Antibody-labeled cells were analyzed on a LSRII flow cytometer (BD Biosciences)
or sorted with a FACSVantage (BD Biosciences). Cell sorting was performed in the
Duke Human Vaccine Institute Research Flow Cytometry Shared Resource Facility.
Flow cytometric data were analyzed with FlowJo software (Treestar). Cytospins of
sorted cells were stained using Hema3 (Fisher Scientific) to confirm their
identities (Fig.
S1). For analysis of BrdU uptake by HSPC, HSC were identified as
Flt3−Lin(Gr-1, CD11b, Ter119, CD4, CD8, B220)
−c-Kit+Sca-1+, MPP were
identified as
Flt3+Lin−c-Kit+Sca-1+,
and GMP were defined as
Lin−c-Kit+Sca-1−FcγRII/III+
[3].
BrdU labeling
HSPC proliferation was determined using a BrdU labeling kit (BD Biosciences). Six
hours before sacrifice, mice were injected i.p. with 1 mg BrdU
in 200 µl PBS. After labeling with fluorochrome-antibody conjugates
specific for surface antigens, BM cells were fixed/permeabilized, treated with
DNase, and incubated with FITC anti-BrdU.
Quantification of serum cytokines
Serum cytokines were analyzed in the Duke Human Vaccine Institute Immune
Reconstitution & Biomarker Shared Resource Facility. Sera were prepared from
naïve BL/6, Mcl-1+, Mcl-1− mice, and BL/6
mice injected with alum or 100 µg Gr-1 mAb. Cytokine concentrations in
undiluted serum samples were determined using a Bio-Plex Pro Group I 23-Plex kit
(Bio-Rad). Readings below the lowest point in the standard curve were
mathematically extrapolated, but these measurements were imprecise.Serum G-CSF was quantified by ELISA. Wells of a 96-well plate were coated
overnight with anti-G-CSF (R&D Systems, clone 67604) then blocked for 1 hour
with PBS/1%BSA. Serum was added to wells and incubated for 2 hours at
room temperature. Bound G-CSF was detected with biotinylated anti-GCSF (R&D
Systems) and SA-horseradish peroxidase (Southern Biotechnology). Horseradish
peroxidase activity was revealed with a tetramethylbenzadine peroxidase
substrate kit (Bio-Rad). G-CSF concentrations in samples were calculated from a
standard curve of recombinant mouseG-CSF (Peprotech); the sensitivity of the
assay was 10 pg/ml G-CSF.
Statistics
Significance in paired data was determined by Student's
t-test. Relationships between cell numbers and the frequencies
of BrdU+ HSC, MPP, and GMP were evaluated using the Pearson
product moment correlation coefficient. Hematopoietic responses of
C/EBPβ-sufficient and -deficient mice to Gr-1 or alum treatment were
compared using a two-way ANOVA with Tukey post-hoc test.
Results
Alum induces HSPC proliferation via IL-1RI-dependent G-CSF induction
Alum elicits reactive neutrophilia by increasing HSC and GMP proliferation
through an IL-1RI-dependent pathway [3]. Since G-CSF is an important
regulator of granulopoiesis [14], we determined if alum induces G-CSF via IL-1RI by
measuring G-CSF concentrations in the serum of immunized BL/6 and congenic
IL-1RI−/− mice. In BL/6 mice, G-CSF concentrations
rose from 70 pg/ml to 2.5 ng/ml at 6 h after immunization, and remained elevated
at 0.7 ng/ml for two days after injection (Fig. 1A). Although serum G-CSF concentrations
were equivalent in naïve BL/6 and IL-1RI−/− mice,
G-CSF production in response to alum in IL-1RI−/− mice
was significantly impaired (Fig.
1A), indicating that alum induces G-CSF via IL-1RI-dependent
signals.
Figure 1
IL-1RI-dependent induction of G-CSF is critical for BM neutrophil
mobilization and increased HSPC proliferation after alum
immunization.
(A) Serum G-CSF concentrations in BL/6 (closed) and
IL-1RI−/− (open) mice after alum
immunization. The mean(+SD) of serum G-CSF concentration is shown;
statistical differences between G-CSF concentrations in BL/6 and
IL-1RI−/− mice at each interval are indicated
(n = 3–7). (B) Effects of G-CSF
neutralization on alum-induced HSC and GMP proliferation. BL/6 mice were
treated or not with anti-G-CSF mAb, then immunized or not with alum;
mice were sacrificed 24 hours later for analysis. Six hours prior to
sacrifice, mice were injected i.p. with BrdU; the mean
frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP
compartments are shown (n = 4–5). (C) Alum
immunization of G-CSF-R−/− mice. BL/6 and
G-CSF-R−/− mice were immunized with alum
(grey) or left untreated (open), and then analyzed for BrdU uptake in
HSC and GMP compartments 24 hours later
(n = 3–9). (D) Effects of G-CSF
neutralization on BM neutrophil mobilization after alum immunization. BM
neutrophils were enumerated 24 hours after immunization (Fig.
S1 defines neutrophil populations). The mean
numbers(+SD) of mature neutrophils in the leg bones are shown for
each treatment (n = 4–5). (E) BL/6 or
G-CSF-R−/− mice were immunized with alum
(grey) or left untreated (open), and the number of BM neutrophils was
determined 24 hours later (n = 3–9). *,
P≤0.05; **, P≤0.01; n.s., not significant.
IL-1RI-dependent induction of G-CSF is critical for BM neutrophil
mobilization and increased HSPC proliferation after alum
immunization.
(A) Serum G-CSF concentrations in BL/6 (closed) and
IL-1RI−/− (open) mice after alum
immunization. The mean(+SD) of serum G-CSF concentration is shown;
statistical differences between G-CSF concentrations in BL/6 and
IL-1RI−/− mice at each interval are indicated
(n = 3–7). (B) Effects of G-CSF
neutralization on alum-induced HSC and GMP proliferation. BL/6 mice were
treated or not with anti-G-CSF mAb, then immunized or not with alum;
mice were sacrificed 24 hours later for analysis. Six hours prior to
sacrifice, mice were injected i.p. with BrdU; the mean
frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP
compartments are shown (n = 4–5). (C) Alum
immunization of G-CSF-R−/− mice. BL/6 and
G-CSF-R−/− mice were immunized with alum
(grey) or left untreated (open), and then analyzed for BrdU uptake in
HSC and GMP compartments 24 hours later
(n = 3–9). (D) Effects of G-CSF
neutralization on BM neutrophil mobilization after alum immunization. BM
neutrophils were enumerated 24 hours after immunization (Fig.
S1 defines neutrophil populations). The mean
numbers(+SD) of mature neutrophils in the leg bones are shown for
each treatment (n = 4–5). (E) BL/6 or
G-CSF-R−/− mice were immunized with alum
(grey) or left untreated (open), and the number of BM neutrophils was
determined 24 hours later (n = 3–9). *,
P≤0.05; **, P≤0.01; n.s., not significant.To investigate the role of G-CSF in alum-induced HSC and GMP proliferation, we
administered a G-CSF neutralizing mAb [34] to BL/6 mice 30 minutes
prior to immunization; HSC and GMP proliferation was measured by BrdU
incorporation one day after immunization [3]. Anti-G-CSF treatment had no
effect on basal HSC and GMP proliferation, but completely abrogated HSC
responses to alum (Fig. 1B).
In contrast, anti-G-CSF treatment only partially blocked the effects of alum on
GMP proliferation (Fig. 1B),
suggesting that G-CSF-independent signals generated during the inflammatory
response may specifically target GMP to increase proliferation. Alternatively,
if G-CSF neutralization is incomplete, GMP may be more sensitive than HSC to
residual G-CSF.We next examined the effects of alum on HSPC proliferation in mice lacking
G-CSF-R [16]. In
naive G-CSF-R−/− mice, the frequencies of
BrdU+ HSC and GMP were identical to congenic BL/6 controls
(Fig. 1C). The number of
HSC in BM of G-CSF-R−/− mice was the same as in BL/6 mice
(0.6±0.2×105 HSC in
G-CSF-R−/− mice vs.
0.6±0.1×105 cells in BL/6 mice, P>0.05), but GMP
numbers were reduced by 60% (2.1±0.5×105 GMP in
G-CSF-R−/− mice vs.
5.0±0.1×105 cells in BL/6 mice, P≤0.01),
consistent with previous reports [15], [16]. Although G-CSF-R was
dispensable for basal proliferation by HSC and GMP, alum did not increase BrdU
uptake by HSC or GMP in G-CSF-R−/− mice (Fig. 1C), indicating that
G-CSF-R is necessary for the proliferative responses of HSC and GMP to
adjuvant.G-CSF has well-documented growth factor properties, but it is also a potent
mobilizer of BM neutrophils [15], [35]. Indeed, anti-G-CSF treatment significantly impaired
neutrophil mobilization by alum (Fig. 1D) and in G-CSF-R−/− mice, alum had no
mobilizing effect on residual BM neutrophils (Fig. 1E) (Fig. S1
defines leukocyte populations). Thus, G-CSF/G-CSF-R blockade impairs two
components of the inflammatory response that directly contribute to reactive
neutrophilia: mobilization of BM neutrophils and increased HSPC
proliferation.
Bone marrow neutropenia by antibody depletion
It is now believed that infections accelerate granulopoiesis through a
transcriptional pathway that is distinct from the processes that maintain
neutrophil pools in the steady-state, but depends on the inflammatory induction
of growth factors [2]. However, emergency granulopoiesis might be an
indirect effect of BM neutropenia, as defects in alum-induced HSPC proliferation
coincided with failed neutrophil mobilization (Fig. 1 and Ref. 3). Indeed, it has been
postulated that the consumption of neutrophil stores during infection might
activate feedback mechanisms of neutrophil replenishment [36]. To test the hypothesis that
reductions in BM neutrophil numbers trigger emergency granulopoiesis, we studied
two experimental models for induced neutropenia that minimize or eliminate
ancillary inflammation.The Gr-1 mAb is used routinely in vivo to deplete neutrophils
[37],
[38]. We
injected BL/6 mice i.p. with 10- or 100 µg of Gr-1 mAb
and compared the loss and recovery of mature neutrophils in blood and BM to that
induced by alum [3]. Whereas alum elicited a multiphasic neutrophilia in
blood, both doses of Gr-1 induced transient neutropenias (>90%
reductions; P≤0.01) for 2 to 4 days (10- or 100 µg Gr-1, respectively)
with recovery on days 6 or 8 (10- or 100 µg Gr-1, respectively) (Fig. 2A). The effects of Gr-1
mAb were specific, as injection of 100 µg rat IgG had no effect on blood
or BM leukocyte numbers (unpublished data).
Figure 2
Adjuvant inflammation and experimental neutropenia elicit similar
changes in granulopoiesis.
BL/6 mice were i.p. injected with Gr-1 mAb [10 µg (open
squares), 100 µg (closed diamonds)] or alum (shaded
triangles), and then blood and BM neutrophils were enumerated at various
intervals. Neutrophils numbers were also determined in Mcl-1-
mice and control littermates. The mean(+SD) numbers of
neutrophils/ml of blood (A) and in the four leg bones (B) after each
treatment are shown. In the right panel, the numbers of blood and BM
neutrophils in Mcl-1+ and Mcl-1− mice
are indicated. Proliferation of HSC (C), MPP (D), and GMP (E) at
intervals after alum or Gr-1 treatment, and in Mcl-1+
and Mcl-1− mice, was determined by BrdU incorporation.
Mice were injected with BrdU 6 hours prior to sacrifice, and the mean
frequency(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in each compartment
is shown (day 0, n = 19; for other intervals,
n = 3–10). (F) BM neutrophil numbers (closed
diamonds) and frequencies of BrdU+ HSC (open squares)
after injection of Gr-1 or alum (as shown in B and C) are co-plotted;
the values at each interval represent the fold change from naïve
mice, expressed as log2. Pearson product moment correlation
coefficients (R) between BM neutrophil numbers and the frequencies of
BrdU+ HSC for each treatment are shown. (G) BL/6
mice were injected with graded amounts of Gr-1 mAb (0, 0.1, 1, 10, and
100 µg; n = 4–7 mice per treatment) and
then BM neutrophil numbers and HSC proliferation were determined two
days later. Significant differences from naïve BL/6 mice are shown
for neutrophil numbers (**, P≤0.01) and frequency of
BrdU+ HSC (††, P≤0.01);
the Pearson product moment correlation coefficient (R) for BM neutrophil
numbers and frequencies of BrdU+ HSC is shown.
Adjuvant inflammation and experimental neutropenia elicit similar
changes in granulopoiesis.
BL/6 mice were i.p. injected with Gr-1 mAb [10 µg (open
squares), 100 µg (closed diamonds)] or alum (shaded
triangles), and then blood and BM neutrophils were enumerated at various
intervals. Neutrophils numbers were also determined in Mcl-1-
mice and control littermates. The mean(+SD) numbers of
neutrophils/ml of blood (A) and in the four leg bones (B) after each
treatment are shown. In the right panel, the numbers of blood and BM
neutrophils in Mcl-1+ and Mcl-1− mice
are indicated. Proliferation of HSC (C), MPP (D), and GMP (E) at
intervals after alum or Gr-1 treatment, and in Mcl-1+
and Mcl-1− mice, was determined by BrdU incorporation.
Mice were injected with BrdU 6 hours prior to sacrifice, and the mean
frequency(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in each compartment
is shown (day 0, n = 19; for other intervals,
n = 3–10). (F) BM neutrophil numbers (closed
diamonds) and frequencies of BrdU+ HSC (open squares)
after injection of Gr-1 or alum (as shown in B and C) are co-plotted;
the values at each interval represent the fold change from naïve
mice, expressed as log2. Pearson product moment correlation
coefficients (R) between BM neutrophil numbers and the frequencies of
BrdU+ HSC for each treatment are shown. (G) BL/6
mice were injected with graded amounts of Gr-1 mAb (0, 0.1, 1, 10, and
100 µg; n = 4–7 mice per treatment) and
then BM neutrophil numbers and HSC proliferation were determined two
days later. Significant differences from naïve BL/6 mice are shown
for neutrophil numbers (**, P≤0.01) and frequency of
BrdU+ HSC (††, P≤0.01);
the Pearson product moment correlation coefficient (R) for BM neutrophil
numbers and frequencies of BrdU+ HSC is shown.Although alum stimulated neutrophilia and Gr-1effected neutropenia (Fig. 2A), the two treatments
induced similar changes in BM neutrophil populations. Injection of either alum
or Gr-1 mAb significantly reduced BM neutrophil numbers for two days (P≤0.01,
Fig. 2B); afterwards, BM
neutrophil numbers recovered and eventually surged above normal levels on days
6–8 (P≤0.01, all) before gradually returning to normal (Fig. 2B). Notably, the
magnitude of the BM neutrophil “rebound” following Gr-1 treatment
outpaced that of alum (Fig.
2B), demonstrating that the myeloablative effects of passive Gr-1 mAb
are sufficient to induce emergency granulopoiesis.Given that alum increases proliferation by HSC, MPP, and GMP [3], we determined
whether Gr-1 treatment also increased HSPC proliferation. The frequencies of
BrdU+ HSC, MPP, and GMP increased significantly within one
day of Gr-1 administration (P≤0.01, all) and then gradually returned to
naïve levels by days 4–6 (Fig. 2C-E). The transient increases in the
frequency of BrdU+ HSC, MPP, and GMP were mirrored in the cell
numbers within each progenitor compartment; cell numbers were elevated when
frequencies of BrdU+ cells were high, and then gradually to
returned to naïve levels (Fig. S2). This observation is consistent with
a recent report describing an expansion of hematopoietic progenitor compartments
following Gr-1 administration [39]. Notably, administration of 10 µg Gr-1 induced
similar proliferative responses in HSPC compartments as alum and BM neutrophil
numbers peaked simultaneously (day 6; Fig. 2B). Injection of 100 µg Gr-1
resulted in a longer period of elevated HSC proliferation (Fig. 2C) that was associated with an even
greater rebound in BM neutrophil numbers on day 8 (Fig. 2B). Thus, Gr-1 depletion elicits a
granulopoietic response that closely mimics that induced by alum, consistent
with the possibility that a reduction in BM neutrophil numbers is itself,
sufficient to elicit increased HSPC proliferation and accelerated neutrophil
production.Notably, alum elicited a BM eosinophilia in addition to neutrophilia whereas Gr-1
had little effect on BM eosinophil numbers (Fig. S3);
inflammation, therefore, more broadly affects hematopoiesis.Although Gr-1 mAb depleted neutrophils, other hematopoietic lineages were also
affected, including Gr-1- B-lineage and erythroid cells (Fig. S3).
While we cannot exclude non-specific antibody effects, we suspect that
reductions in these cell compartments are secondary to the loss of
Gr-1+ cells.
Bone marrow neutropenia by genetic deletion
We also examined a genetic model of neutropenia for evidence of increased HSPC
proliferation. Mice with the myeloid-specific deletion of the anti-apoptotic
factor Mcl-1 (LysMCre/wt Mcl-1f/f mice; hereafter
Mcl-1− mice) exhibit a highly specific defect in neutrophil
survival [30]. Whereas neutrophil numbers in the blood and BM of
Mcl-1− mice were only 10% and 20%,
respectively, of control littermates (P≤0.01; Fig. 2A, B), the number of developing
neutrophils (Fig. S1) was 2-fold greater in Mcl-1− mice
(P≤0.05; Table S1). Eosinophil, monocyte, erythroid and B-lineage cell
numbers were normal or slightly elevated (Table
S1).Mature neutrophils in Mcl-1−/− mice are lost by a
presumably non-inflammatory, apoptotic mechanism [30], [40]. However, HSC, MPP, and
GMP proliferation was constitutively increased in neutropenicMcl-1− mice compared with littermate controls (P≤0.01,
all) (Figs. 2C-E) and the
numbers of cells in each HSPC compartment were significantly elevated
(P≤0.01, HSC and GMP; P≤0.05, MPP)(Fig. S2), consistent with the hypothesis that
neutropenia is sufficient to stimulate HSPC proliferation and accelerate
neutrophil production.
Induced proliferation of HSPC is inversely proportional to BM neutrophil
numbers
The reciprocal association between BM neutrophil numbers and HSPC proliferation
in BL/6 mice after alum or Gr-1 mAb injection, and in naïve
Mcl-1− mice (Fig. 2A–E) suggested that the mature neutrophil compartment
might directly regulate the proliferation rates of hematopoietic progenitor
cells. During the loss and recovery of BM neutrophils following injection of
Gr-1 mAb or alum, we observed strong inverse correlations between the numbers of
BM neutrophils and the frequencies of BrdU+ HSC
(R = −0.84 to −0.94, P≤0.01, Fig. 2F), MPP
(R = −0.78 to −0.94, P≤0.05), and GMP
(R = −0.88 to −0.93, P≤0.01). Remarkably, an
inverse relationship between BM neutrophil numbers and HSPC proliferation rates
was evident not only when BM neutrophil numbers were low (days 1–2 after
Gr-1 or alum, Fig. 2F) but
also when BM neutrophil numbers climbed above steady-state levels (day 6, 10
µg Gr-1; days 8–12, 100 µg Gr-1; Fig. 2F). These findings are consistent with
the activity of a feedback system that couples HSPC proliferation to the
population density of BM neutrophils.If BM neutrophils regulate HSPC proliferation through feedback, then changes in
BM neutrophil numbers should elicit reciprocal and proportional changes in
proliferation rates. We therefore injected mice with graded doses of Gr-1 mAb
(0.1–100 µg) and observed dose-dependent decreases in BM neutrophil
numbers on day 2, the nadir of neutrophil losses (Fig. 2G). In these mice, increased
frequencies of BrdU+ HSC (Fig. 2G) were highly correlated
(R = −0.89; P≤0.01) with the extent of neutrophil
depletion. Together, these findings implicate the BM neutrophil population as an
important control element in the regulation of granulopoiesis; changes in the
numbers of BM neutrophils alone are sufficient to alter HSPC proliferation.
Emergency granulopoiesis in the absence of inflammation
As noted, it is not easy to disentangle the effects of inflammation (IL-1, G-CSF,
etc.) on granulopoiesis from those of neutrophil depletion
(Fig. 2). If neutrophil
depletion by Gr-1 mAb elicits significant inflammation, perhaps through
complement fixation or Fc receptor signaling, then increased HSPC proliferation
might not be due to reduced BM neutrophil numbers.However, mice deficient for C1q [27] or C3 [28] exhibited increased HSC
proliferation and neutrophil production after Gr-1 administration that were
similar to congenic BL/6 mice (Fig.
3A). In FcRγ−/− mice [29], the neutrophil depleting
capacity of Gr-1 mAb was diminished, yet the lower reductions in BM neutrophil
numbers remained associated with significant increases in HSC proliferation (day
1, P≤0.01) and rebounds in BM neutrophil numbers (day 8, P≤0.05) (Fig. 3A). Granulopoietic
responses to Gr-1 treatment, therefore, are independent of complement or
FcR-dependent events.
Figure 3
Neutrophil depletion with Gr-1 mAb elicits emergency granulopoiesis
with minimal inflammation.
(A) BL/6 and congenic C3−/−,
C1q−/−, and
FcRγ−/− mice were treated with 100
µg G-1 mAb; the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils (closed)
and frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ HSC (open) at days 1
and 8 after treatment are shown. (B) BL/6 mice and congenic
IL-1RI−/−, MyD88−/−,
and RAG1−/− mice were injected with alum or 100
µg Gr-1 mAb; the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils (closed)
and mean frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ HSC (open) at
days 1 and 8 after treatment are shown. (n = 19
BL/6 mice, day 0; n = 3–8 mice for all other
data points). (C) BL/6 mice were treated with 100 µg Gr-1 mAb or
100 µg Ly-6G-specific mAb (clone 1A8); the mean numbers(+SD)
of BM neutrophils (closed diamonds for Gr-1 treatment, closed squares
for anti-Ly-6G treatment) and frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ HSC (open diamonds for Gr-1 treatment, open
squares for anti-Ly-6G treatment) at days 1 and 8 after antibody
injection are shown. (n = 3–5 mice for days 0
and 1, n = 2 for both treatments at day 8).
Neutrophil depletion with Gr-1 mAb elicits emergency granulopoiesis
with minimal inflammation.
(A) BL/6 and congenic C3−/−,
C1q−/−, and
FcRγ−/− mice were treated with 100
µg G-1 mAb; the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils (closed)
and frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ HSC (open) at days 1
and 8 after treatment are shown. (B) BL/6 mice and congenic
IL-1RI−/−, MyD88−/−,
and RAG1−/− mice were injected with alum or 100
µg Gr-1 mAb; the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils (closed)
and mean frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ HSC (open) at
days 1 and 8 after treatment are shown. (n = 19
BL/6 mice, day 0; n = 3–8 mice for all other
data points). (C) BL/6 mice were treated with 100 µg Gr-1 mAb or
100 µg Ly-6G-specific mAb (clone 1A8); the mean numbers(+SD)
of BM neutrophils (closed diamonds for Gr-1 treatment, closed squares
for anti-Ly-6G treatment) and frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ HSC (open diamonds for Gr-1 treatment, open
squares for anti-Ly-6G treatment) at days 1 and 8 after antibody
injection are shown. (n = 3–5 mice for days 0
and 1, n = 2 for both treatments at day 8).IL-1RI expression by radiation resistant cells is necessary for alum-induced
emergency granulopoiesis [3]. To determine if granulopoietic responses to
neutrophil depletion also depend on IL-1RI signaling, we administered Gr-1 mAb
to IL-1RI−/− mice; as expected [3], granulopoietic responses to
alum were severely impaired in IL-1RI−/− mice (Fig. 3B) but Gr-1 treatment
elicited increases in HSC proliferation (day 1, P≤0.01) and BM neutrophil
numbers (day 8, P≤0.01) that were identical to congenic BL/6 mice (Fig. 3B). Similarly, mice
lacking MyD88, a crucial signaling component of many TLR [41] and the IL-1, IL-18 [26], and IL-33
receptors [42], did not activate emergency granulopoiesis in
response to alum, but responded with increased HSC proliferation (day 1;
P≤0.01) and granulopoietic output (day 8; P≤0.05) following treatment with
Gr-1 mAb (Fig. 3B).T cells have been implicated as positive regulators of granulopoiesis through the
production of IL-17 [43]. However, RAG1−/− mice, which
lack both T and B-lymphocytes [25], had normal numbers of
developing and mature neutrophils in BM (Table S1), and the frequencies of
BrdU+ HSC, MPP, and GMP were identical to congenic BL/6
controls (Fig. 3B,
unpublished data; P>0.05). Furthermore, granulopoietic responses in
RAG1−/− mice to both alum and Gr-1 were identical to
BL/6 mice (Fig. 3B),
indicating that signals from T or B lymphocytes are dispensable for HSPC
responses to these treatments.Our survey (Fig. 3A, B) of
inflammatory defects provided no evidence that passive Gr-1 mAb triggers HSPC
proliferation via intermediate, inflammatory pathways. Notably, HSC
proliferation increased only when BM neutrophil numbers decreased, whether by
mobilization in response to alum or depletion by Gr-1 mAb (Fig. 3B). We conclude that inflammation
targets BM neutrophils for mobilization, but that emergency granulopoiesis is
independent of IL-1RI, MyD88, or lymphocyte-derived signals.Neutrophils express the highest amount of Gr-1 surface antigen of cells in the BM
and blood (Fig.
S1) but, as previously reported [44], treatment of mice with Gr-1
mAb depleted Ly-6G-Ly-6C+ monocytes (Fig. S3) in
addition to neutrophils. Losses of monocytes, and not neutrophils, might account
for increased HSPC proliferation after Gr-1 injection. However, mice treated
with a Ly-6G-specific mAb [44] exhibited changes in hematopoiesis that were similar
to those in mice treated in parallel with Gr-1 mAb: anti-Ly-6G treatment
significantly reduced BM neutrophil numbers (day 1, P≤0.01) and increased
frequencies of BrdU+ HSC (day 1, P≤0.01)(Fig. 3C). We conclude that the changes in
hematopoiesis following Gr-1 administration are primarily due to the depletion
of neutrophils.
Cytokines, growth factors, and chemokines elicited by inflammation or
neutropenia
Several growth factors have been implicated in emergency granulopoiesis,
including G-CSF, GM-CSF, IL-3, and IL-6. We determined the concentrations of
these factors and 19 other cytokines, growth factors, and chemokines (Fig. S4) in
the sera of naïve Mcl-1+, Mcl-1−, and BL/6
mice, and in BL/6 animals injected with alum or Gr-1 mAb (6 h and 1-, 2-, and 8
days after treatment). The inclusion of naïve Mcl-1− mice
and their Mcl-1+ littermate controls allowed us to distinguish
patterns of cytokine changes elicited by inflammation from those that are solely
the consequence of neutropenia.Of the 23 factors surveyed, the levels of 15, IL-1α/β, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4,
IL-10, IL-12 p40/p70, IL-13, IL-17,GM-CSF, MIP-1α/β, RANTES, and
TNFα, were identical in naïve Mcl-1+,
Mcl-1−, and BL/6 mice and remained unchanged in BL/6 mice
in response to alum or Gr-1 mAb (Fig. S4). The serum concentrations of three
cytokines, IL-9, eotaxin, and IFNγ, fell in response to alum or Gr-1; IL-9,
eotaxin, and IFNγ levels in naïve Mcl-1+ and
Mcl-1− mice were also low and not significantly different
(Fig.
S4).Alum increased serum IL-5, IL-6, KC, MCP-1 (Fig. S4),
and G-CSF (Fig. 4A); the
serum levels of these cytokines peaked at 6 h after injection and then returned
to normal (Fig.
S4). Gr-1 administration elicited only KC, MCP-1 (Fig. S4),
and G-CSF (Fig. 4A). In
contrast to the rapid rise in serum G-CSF elicited by alum, there was no
increase in G-CSF 6 h after Gr-1 injection (Fig. 4A) but G-CSF levels gradually increased
to those observed in alum-treated mice on days 1 and 2 before returning to
control levels on day 8 (Fig.
4A). In neutropenicMcl-1− mice, G-CSF (Fig. 4A) and KC (Fig. S4)
were also constitutively elevated compared to control littermates.
Figure 4
Neutrophil depletion elicits G-CSF-dependent and -independent HSPC
proliferation.
(A) Serum from naïve BL/6, Mcl-1+ (closed circle),
Mcl-1− (open circle) mice, and BL/6 mice treated
with alum (open triangles) or Gr-1 mAb (closed diamonds) was analyzed
for G-CSF in a multiplex bead array. The mean concentrations(+SD)
of G-CSF/ml of serum are shown (n = 3–7). (B)
Serum G-CSF in BL/6 (closed) and IL-1RI−/− (open)
mice after Gr-1 administration; the mean concentrations(+SD) of
G-CSF/ml are shown (n = 3–5). (C) Effect of
G-CSF neutralization on proliferative response of HSPC to induced
neutropenia. BL/6 mice were injected or not with anti-GCSF, then
administered Gr-1 mAb. The mean frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP compartments, and the
numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils on day 1 after treatment are shown
(n = 4–5). (D) BL/6 and
G-CSF-R−/− mice were treated or not with Gr-1
mAb, then sacrificed 24 hours later for analysis. The mean
frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP
compartments, and the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils are shown
(n = 3–9). *, P≤0.05; **,
P≤0.01.
Neutrophil depletion elicits G-CSF-dependent and -independent HSPC
proliferation.
(A) Serum from naïve BL/6, Mcl-1+ (closed circle),
Mcl-1− (open circle) mice, and BL/6 mice treated
with alum (open triangles) or Gr-1 mAb (closed diamonds) was analyzed
for G-CSF in a multiplex bead array. The mean concentrations(+SD)
of G-CSF/ml of serum are shown (n = 3–7). (B)
Serum G-CSF in BL/6 (closed) and IL-1RI−/− (open)
mice after Gr-1 administration; the mean concentrations(+SD) of
G-CSF/ml are shown (n = 3–5). (C) Effect of
G-CSF neutralization on proliferative response of HSPC to induced
neutropenia. BL/6 mice were injected or not with anti-GCSF, then
administered Gr-1 mAb. The mean frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP compartments, and the
numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils on day 1 after treatment are shown
(n = 4–5). (D) BL/6 and
G-CSF-R−/− mice were treated or not with Gr-1
mAb, then sacrificed 24 hours later for analysis. The mean
frequencies(+SD) of BrdU+ cells in the HSC and GMP
compartments, and the mean numbers(+SD) of BM neutrophils are shown
(n = 3–9). *, P≤0.05; **,
P≤0.01.The modest and delayed increases in G-CSF observed after Gr-1 injection and the
constitutive G-CSF in naive Mcl-1− mice might represent a
direct consequence of neutropenia (Fig. 4A).Whereas alum did not elicit G-CSF in the absence of IL-1RI
signals (Fig. 1A), Gr-1
depletion elicited G-CSF equally in BL/6 and IL-1RI−/−
mice (Fig. 4B), indicating
that G-CSF can be induced through two distinct pathways: an IL-1RI-dependent
inflammatory pathway and an IL-1RI-independent pathway activated by neutropenia.
We conclude that IL-1RI signals rapidly induce G-CSF and BM neutrophil
mobilization, but that G-CSF levels are sustained as a result of BM
neutropenia.
Neutropenia elicits G-CSF dependent and independent increases in HSPC
proliferation
G-CSF's capacity to modulate BM neutrophil numbers by controlling their
migration raised the possibility that G-CSF's effects on HSPC proliferation
might be indirect. To determine if G-CSF/G-CSF-R signals are required for
proliferative HSPC responses to neutropenia, we injected mice with G-CSF
neutralizing mAb then administered Gr-1 mAb. With G-CSF neutralization, the
effects of Gr-1 depletion on HSC and GMP proliferation were reduced, but the
frequencies of BrdU+ HSC and GMP were still increased over
naïve controls (P≤0.05, Fig. 4C), indicating that a portion of the HSPC response to BM
neutropenia is G-CSF-dependent.We next examined the effects of Gr-1 depletion on
G-CSF-R−/− mice. Gr-1 mAb depleted the residual BM
neutrophils in G-CSF-R−/− mice but failed to elicit an
increase in GMP proliferation (Fig.
4D). However, the frequency of BrdU+ HSC rose
modestly but significantly after Gr-1 injection, indicating that neutropenia
activates a G-CSF-R-independent mechanism for increased HSC proliferation (Fig. 4D).
C/EBPβ is dispensable for increased HSPC proliferation during emergency
granulopoiesis
C/EBPβ is thought to be necessary for a distinct pathway of granulopoiesis
elicited by inflammatory signals [2]. However, we observed that neutropenia increased HSPC
proliferation and neutrophil production similar to alum, but without evidence of
inflammation (Fig. 2 and
3). To determine if
C/EBPβ is necessary for granulopoietic responses to neutropenia, we depleted
neutrophils in C/EBPβ−/− mice and
C/EBPβ-sufficient littermates with Gr-1 mAb. Hematopoiesis in
C/EBPβ+/+ and C/EBPβ+/−
mice was identical; data from these mice were pooled and are referred to
hereafter as C/EBPβ+ mice.C/EBPβ−/− mice had equivalent numbers of BM
neutrophils as C/EBPβ+ mice (Fig. 5A), consistent with previous reports
[45], and
neutrophils were similarly depleted by Gr-1 mAb (Fig. 5A). However, the supranormal recovery
of BM neutrophils was blunted in mice lacking C/EBPβ (Fig. 5A); BM neutrophil numbers peaked on day
6 only modestly higher than in untreated mice (1.7-fold, P≤0.05), and were
only half of that in C/EBPβ+ mice at the same interval
(P≤0.01) (Fig. 5A). Thus,
C/EBPβ is required for optimal granulopoietic responses to neutropenia.
Figure 5
C/EBPβ is dispensable for proliferative responses of HSPC to Gr-1
administration or alum immunization.
C/EBPβ−/− mice (open) and control littermates
(closed) were injected with 10 µg Gr-1 mAb (A) or alum (B). The
mean numbers(+SD) of mature and immature neutrophils (Fig.
S1) in BM, and mean frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ cells in the HSC, MPP, and GMP compartments at
different intervals after treatment are shown. Significant differences
between C/EBPβ+ and
C/EBPβ−/− mice at corresponding intervals
are indicated (day 0, n = 12 for
C/EBPβ+ mice and n = 7 for
C/EBPβ−/− mice; for all others,
n = 3–5 mice). **, P≤0.01.
C/EBPβ is dispensable for proliferative responses of HSPC to Gr-1
administration or alum immunization.
C/EBPβ−/− mice (open) and control littermates
(closed) were injected with 10 µg Gr-1 mAb (A) or alum (B). The
mean numbers(+SD) of mature and immature neutrophils (Fig.
S1) in BM, and mean frequencies(+SD) of
BrdU+ cells in the HSC, MPP, and GMP compartments at
different intervals after treatment are shown. Significant differences
between C/EBPβ+ and
C/EBPβ−/− mice at corresponding intervals
are indicated (day 0, n = 12 for
C/EBPβ+ mice and n = 7 for
C/EBPβ−/− mice; for all others,
n = 3–5 mice). **, P≤0.01.C/EBPβ is thought to allow for increased proliferation of GMP in response to
growth factors [2] but, surprisingly,
C/EBPβ−/− mice exhibited similar increases in
frequencies of BrdU+ HSC, MPP, and GMP as
C/EBPβ+ mice (Fig. 5A). Although ANOVA indicated
significant differences in the proliferative responses of HSC and GMP, but not
MPP, in C/EBPβ+ and C/EBPβ−/−
mice (P≤0.05), a Tukey post-hoc test failed to reveal statistical
significance in pair-wise comparisons at individual time points. Notably, the
frequencies of BrdU+ HSC and GMP were slightly higher in
C/EBPβ−/− mice than in
C/EBPβ+ mice at day 4 after Gr-1 treatment (Fig. 5A), although we are
uncertain of the biological relevance of this modest, non-significant increase.
We found no evidence that C/EBPβ deficiency restricts the proliferative
capacity of HSC, MPP, or GMP.The immature neutrophil population, comprising myelocytes and metamyelocytes
(SSCintLy-6BintGr-1intCD11b+,
Fig.
S1), underwent identical changes in C/EBPβ+ and
C/EBPβ−/− mice after Gr-1 treatment (Fig. 5A), indicating
equivalent expansions of progenitor compartments and cellular delivery into the
neutrophil lineage. These observations dissociate C/EBPβ from the
proliferative effects of growth factors on HSPC; instead, the lack of rebounding
neutrophilias in C/EBPβ−/− mice stems from a defect
at the transition between immature and mature neutrophils.Interestingly, C/EBPβ was dispensable for granulopoietic responses to alum.
Alum elicited similar increases in HSPC proliferation in
C/EBPβ+ and C/EBPβ−/− mice
(Fig. 5B). The number of
mature neutrophils in BM of C/EBPβ−/− mice on day 6,
although modestly lower, was not significantly different from control mice
(Fig. 5B). Since Gr-1
administration elicits a more robust granulopoietic response than alum (Fig. 2B),
C/EBPβ-independent pathways of neutrophil differentiation must suffice for
the replenishment of mature neutrophils after immunization.
Discussion
Microbial infection and/or tissue damage elicit growth factors that can accelerate
granulopoiesis to expedite the elimination of pathogens and necrotic cells [46]. Recent
studies have suggested that “emergency” or “demand-driven”
granulopoiesis represents a developmental pathway distinct from the steady-state
hematopoiesis that normally sustains neutrophil pools [2]. Our findings, however, indicate
that the depletion of neutrophil reserves during acute inflammation activates a
feedback mechanism that increases G-CSF production/availability and accelerates
neutrophil production. We propose that feedback mechanisms that maintain neutrophil
pools in the steady-state also play critical roles in the accelerated granulopoiesis
associated with inflammation.We have shown that alum induces emergency granulopoiesis via IL-1RI-dependent signals
[3]. Notably,
defective emergency granulopoiesis in IL-1RI−/− mice was
accompanied by failed mobilization of BM neutrophils [3]. Now we demonstrate that alum
triggers IL-1RI-dependent activation of G-CSF (Fig. 1A), and that G-CSF/G-CSF-R signals are
necessary for both the proliferative responses of HSPC and the mobilization of BM
neutrophils (Fig. 1B-E).That HSPC proliferation and neutrophil mobilization are tightly linked in IL-1RI- and
G-CSF-R deficient mice suggested that changes in HSPC proliferation and
granulopoiesis in response to inflammation might reflect the common reduction in BM
neutrophil reserves. Evidence consistent with this sort of feedback control have
been offered previously [6], [7], [8], and most mathematical models for granulopoietic
regulation contain feedback components linking neutrophil population density to
proliferation and differentiation by neutrophil precursors [10], [11], [12], [13]. Recent studies have suggested
that IL-17-producing T cells modulate G-CSF production as part of a feedback
mechanism that regulates granulopoiesis [47]. In our hands, however,
the BM of RAG1−/− and control mice contained equivalent
numbers of neutrophils (Table S1) and RAG1−/− mice
exhibited normal granulopoietic responses to alum or passive Gr-1 antibody (Fig. 3B). Studies of
RAG1−/− mice do not rule out lymphoid-tissue inducer
cells or double negative 1 T cells as sources of IL-17 for granulopoietic regulation
[48], [49], but mature T
cells are unnecessary for steady-state and inflammatory control of BM neutrophil
numbers. We note also that IL-17 serum levels in BL/6 mice given alum or Gr-1
antibody were not different from naïve controls, Mcl-1−, or
Mcl-1+ mice (Fig. S4).To determine the contribution of feedback to emergency granulopoiesis, we compared
the effects of neutropenia to those elicited by inflammation by tracking
simultaneously HSPC proliferation and neutrophil production. BM neutropenia was
invariably coupled to increased HSPC proliferation, regardless of how neutrophil
numbers were reduced (Fig. 2).
Neutrophil depletion with Gr-1 mAb induced rapid increases in HSC, MPP, and GMP
proliferation followed by supranormal BM neutrophil numbers (Fig. 2); mice rendered chronically neutropenic by
inactivation of Mcl-1 in myeloid cells [30] had constitutively elevated
rates of HSPC proliferation (Fig.
2C-E) and a surplus of immature BM neutrophils (Table S1).Significantly, increased HSPC proliferation in Mcl-1− mice was only
associated with the absence of mature neutrophils; all other hematopoietic lineages
in Mcl-1− mice equaled (or were greater than) that of littermate
controls (Table
S1). Given that HSPC proliferation in lymphopenicRAG1−/− mice was indistinguishable from controls (Fig. 3B), we conclude that the
link between mature BM neutrophils and HSPC proliferation is specific. Mature
neutrophils in BM actively control the pace of granulopoiesis by regulating HSPC
proliferation.Following alum or Gr-1 administration, and in Mcl-1− mice, BM
neutropenia was associated with lesser or greater increases in serum G-CSF (Fig. 4A), a cytokine with
pleiotropic effects [15], [16]. Whereas alum induced sharp, IL-1RI-dependent increases
in G-CSF followed by longer periods of modest G-CSF elevation (Fig. 4A), the neutropenia induced by Gr-1 mAb or
Mcl-1 deficiency was associated only with the modest G-CSF plateau (Fig. 4A). These distinct kinetics
suggest multiple pathways of G-CSF induction: one driven by inflammation and the
second by neutropenia itself. Whereas alum failed to induce G-CSF in
IL-1RI−/− mice (Fig. 1A), neutropenia induced by Gr-1 mAb
elicited G-CSF equally in BL/6 and IL-1RI−/− mice (Fig. 4B). We conclude that alum
elicits a rapid increase in G-CSF via IL-1RI to mobilize BM neutrophil reserves; the
sustained plateau of elevated G-CSF, however, is a consequence of BM
neutropenia.Mice lacking G-CSF-R are neutropenic (Fig. 1D, 4C and
[16]) but, in
contrast to neutropenicMcl-1− mice, HSPC proliferation in
G-CSF-R−/− mice was normal, indicating that HSC and GMP
are insensitive to neutrophil population density in the absence of G-CSF-R. However,
depletion of the residual BM neutrophils in G-CSF-R−/− mice
induced a modest, but significant increase in HSC (but not GMP) proliferation (Fig. 4D). Thus the G-CSF/G-CSF-R
axis is an important mediator of density-dependent feedback between BM neutrophils
and HSPC, but an additional, G-CSF-R independent feedback signal acts specifically
on HSC.We suggest that BM neutrophils suppress HSPC proliferation by regulating the
availability of G-CSF (and perhaps other growth factors) to drive HSPC proliferation
and differentiation; the strength of suppression is proportional to the numbers of
mature neutrophils in BM. By mobilizing neutrophils, inflammation activates this
feedback mechanism to increase HSPC proliferation and neutrophil output. As
granulopoiesis accelerates, the number of mature neutrophils in BM increases,
reestablishing a suppressive environment and eventually, the steady-state
equilibrium.Recent studies concluded that the transcription factors C/EBPα and C/EBPβ
operate in GMP as developmental switches for independent granulopoietic pathways,
and that the absence of reactive neutrophilia in
C/EBPβ−/− mice is the consequence of defective HSPC
proliferation [2].
Our observations, however, indicate that proliferative responses of
C/EBPβ−/− HSPC to neutrophil depletion or
alum-induced inflammation are normal (Fig. 5). Instead, in C/EBPβ−/− mice, the
final maturation of immature neutrophils is impaired during granulopoietic recovery
from Gr-1 treatment (Fig. 5A).
Our data suggest that C/EBPα and C/EBPβ operate at distinct stages of
granulopoiesis, with C/EBPα directing the differentiation of CMP to GMP [4], and C/EBPβ
acting at terminal neutrophil differentiation. C/EBPβ-dependent processes are
necessary for the rapid and efficient generation of mature neutrophils during
emergency granulopoiesis, but are not rate-limiting in steady-state conditions, as
BM neutrophil reserves are intact in naïve C/EBPβ−/−
mice (Fig. 5).We conclude that regulatory feedback is an important source of signals for the
induction of emergency granulopoiesis, a view that can explain patterns of HSPC
proliferation that do not fit standard granulopoietic models. For example, the lack
of HSPC proliferation in response to vaccinia virus in
MyD88−/− mice [50] might be a consequence of
impaired neutrophil mobilization. Conversely, pathogens or agents that drain the BM
neutrophil reserve will trigger G-CSF production and increase HSPC proliferation.
Evaluations of growth factors and/or microbial products on HSPC proliferation and
granulopoiesis must consider the effects of neutrophil mobilization.Over the last 50 years, various mathematical models have been developed to describe
the changes in granulopoiesis following the perturbation of neutrophil compartments.
Our observations are remarkably consistent with models that posit the BM neutrophil
compartment as the primary variable for the regulation of granulopoiesis [10], [11]. Our
findings, however, imply that the regulatory effects of BM neutrophil population
density extend to the accelerated granulopoiesis associated with inflammation.Flow cytometric definitions of bone marrow leukocytes.
Ter119− cells in BM were divided into four populations
(R1–R4) based on side-scatter properties and staining with Ly-6B mAb.
Flow cytometric definitions of lymphocytes (R1), eosinophils (R2),
neutrophils (R3), and monocytes (R4) were based on the expression Gr-1,
Ly-6G, Ly-6C, CD11b, CCR3, CX3CR1-GFP, TCRβ, and B220 and were confirmed
by histological examination of sorted cells. Neutrophil lineage cells (R3)
were subdivided into three populations based on expression of CD11b and
Ly-6G or Gr-1. Cells in R5 expressed the progenitor markers CD31, CD34 and
c-Kit, and exhibited morphological features of myeloblasts and
promyelocytes. Cells in R6 lost CD31 and CD34 and had low c-Kit staining;
histologically, they were classified as myelocytes and metamyelocytes. Cells
in R7 did not express the progenitor markers CD31, CD34, or c-Kit and
exhibited histological features of band and segmented neutrophils.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Effects of adjuvant immunization and Gr-1 administration on HSPC
numbers. BL/6 mice were injected i.p. with 10
µg Gr-1 (open squares), 100 µg Gr-1 (closed diamonds), or an
alum/antigen mixture (shaded triangles). BM cells of the hindlimbs were
analyzed at different intervals by flow cytometry, and the numbers of HSC,
MPP, and GMP were determined. The mean(+SD) numbers of cells in the
femurs and tibiae at each interval are shown (day 0,
n = 19; for others,
n = 3–10). In the right panel, the numbers of
HSC, MPP, and GMP in the BM of Mcl-1-sufficient and deficient mice are
shown.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Effects of adjuvant immunization and Gr-1 administration on monocytes,
eosinophils, B-lineage cells, and erythroid lineage cells in BM.
BL/6 mice were injected i.p. with 10 µg Gr-1 (open
squares), 100 µg Gr-1 (closed diamonds), or an alum/antigen mixture
(shaded triangles). BM cells of the hindlimbs were analyzed at different
intervals by flow cytometry, and the numbers of monocytes, eosinophils,
B-lineage cells (B220+), and erythroid lineage cells
(Ter119+) were determined. The mean(+SD) numbers of
cells in the femurs and tibiae at each interval are shown (day 0,
n = 19; for others,
n = 3–10). Significant differences from
naïve mice are shown for treatment with 10 µg Gr-1 (*,
P≤0.05 and **, P≤0.01), treatment with 100 µg Gr-1
(†, P≤0.05 and ††, P≤0.01), and immunization with
alum (#, P≤0.05 and ##, P≤0.01).(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Serum cytokines in inflamed and neutropenicmice. (A) The
concentrations of cytokines in sera of BL/6 mice immunized with alum (shaded
triangles) or treated with 100 µg Gr-1 mAb (closed diamonds) on days
0, 0.25, 1, 2, and 8 were determined using a multiplex bead array
(n = 4–5 mice per data point). (B) Serum
concentrations of cytokines in control Mcl-1+ mice (open,
n = 3) and neutropenicMcl-1− mice
(shaded, n = 7) are shown. The dotted horizontal line
in each graph represents the lowest concentration of confident
detection.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Numbers of BM leukocytes (x10
−
) and control littermates
(Mcl-1
−
mice and congenic C57BL/6 mice. The mean numbers(±SD)
(x105) of each leukocyte type in the femurs and tibiae of
Mcl-1− and congenic Mcl-1+ mice, and in
RAG1−/− and congenic BL/6 mice are shown. See
Figure
S1 for flow cyometric definitions of B-lineage cells,
eosinophils, monocytes, and neutrophil subpopulations. Statistical
significance between the numbers of cells in knockout mice and congenic
controls was determined by Student's t-test;
(n = 5 for Mcl-1+ mice,
n = 10 for Mcl-1− mice;
n = 19 for BL/6 mice; n = 4 for
RAG1−/− mice).(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: Claudine S Kadmon; Cameron T Landers; Haiyan S Li; Stephanie S Watowich; Antony Rodriguez; Katherine Y King Journal: Exp Hematol Date: 2017-09-11 Impact factor: 3.084
Authors: Neha Kamran; Youping Li; Maria Sierra; Mahmoud S Alghamri; Padma Kadiyala; Henry D Appelman; Marta Edwards; Pedro R Lowenstein; Maria G Castro Journal: Oncoimmunology Date: 2017-12-14 Impact factor: 8.110