| Literature DB >> 25926830 |
Sally S M Lee-Sayer1, Yifei Dong1, Arif A Arif1, Mia Olsson1, Kelly L Brown2, Pauline Johnson1.
Abstract
Hyaluronan is made and extruded from cells to form a pericellular or extracellular matrix (ECM) and is present in virtually all tissues in the body. The size and form of hyaluronan present in tissues are indicative of a healthy or inflamed tissue, and the interactions of hyaluronan with immune cells can influence their response. Thus, in order to understand how inflammation is regulated, it is necessary to understand these interactions and their consequences. Although there is a large turnover of hyaluronan in our bodies, the large molecular mass form of hyaluronan predominates in healthy tissues. Upon tissue damage and/or infection, the ECM and hyaluronan are broken down and an inflammatory response ensues. As inflammation is resolved, the ECM is restored, and high molecular mass hyaluronan predominates again. Immune cells encounter hyaluronan in the tissues and lymphoid organs and respond differently to high and low molecular mass forms. Immune cells differ in their ability to bind hyaluronan and this can vary with the cell type and their activation state. For example, peritoneal macrophages do not bind soluble hyaluronan but can be induced to bind after exposure to inflammatory stimuli. Likewise, naïve T cells, which typically express low levels of the hyaluronan receptor, CD44, do not bind hyaluronan until they undergo antigen-stimulated T cell proliferation and upregulate CD44. Despite substantial knowledge of where and when immune cells bind hyaluronan, why immune cells bind hyaluronan remains a major outstanding question. Here, we review what is currently known about the interactions of hyaluronan with immune cells in both healthy and inflamed tissues and discuss how hyaluronan binding by immune cells influences the inflammatory response.Entities:
Keywords: CD44; hyaluronan; immune cells; inflammation; leukocytes
Year: 2015 PMID: 25926830 PMCID: PMC4396519 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Model showing HA turnover at homeostasis and during inflammation. At homeostasis (A), stromal cells produce ECM, including HA, which becomes decorated with proteoglycans such as versican (14–16), indicated by the yellow brush structures. HA is turned over in tissues, likely by CD44-mediated cellular uptake by fibroblasts and macrophages (17), then degraded by Hyal 1 and 2 (12, 13). (B) During inflammation, the levels of HA increase and the ECM becomes susceptible to damage and fragmentation (18–20). Inflammation induced HA binding proteins such as TSG-6 bind and crosslink itself or the heavy chain of IαI (HC) to HA (21, 22) and in some situations such as chronic inflammation, HA deposits may develop (3, 18). CD44-mediated uptake of HA fragments by macrophages is thought to play an important role in resolving inflammation (19).
HA binding ability of immune cells.
| Cell type | Stimulation | Type of HA binding | HA receptor | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monocyte (human) | TNFα, LPS, IL-1, IFN-γ | Inducible | CD44 | ( |
| Alveolar macrophages (human, rodents) | None | Constitutive | CD44 | ( |
| Peritoneal macrophage (mouse) | LPS with IFNγ, or IL-4 | Inducible | CD44 | ( |
| Bone marrow-derived macrophages (mouse) | LPS with IFNγ, TNFα, or IL-4 | Inducible | CD44 | ( |
| Monocyte-derived DC (human) | CD40L expressing fibroblasts | Inducible | CD44 | ( |
| B cells (human, mouse) | PMA, IL-5, LPS | Inducible, a subset binds | CD44 | ( |
| T cells (mouse) | PMA/ionomycin, CD3 antibodies, specific antigen, or superantigen | Inducible, often a subset binds | CD44 | ( |
| CD4+ CD25+ T regulatory cells (human and mouse) | CD3 +/− CD28 activation | Inducible, a subset binds | CD44 | ( |
| Neutrophil (mouse) | LPS induced liver inflammation | Binding to SHAP modified HA | CD44, not RHAMM | ( |
| NK cells (mouse) | IL-2, IL-15 | Inducible, a subset binds | CD44 | ( |
| Platelets (mouse) | None | Constitutive | CD44 | ( |
Figure 2Timeline of the T cell response and HA binding. Before immune challenge, naïve T cells express low levels of CD44 and have low affinity/avidity for HA (55). Following activation, HA binding is induced (55, 68) and marks the most proliferative, activated T cells (54). HA binding on effector T cells has a role in T cell extravasation into inflamed peritoneum (68), and marks the majority of cytotoxic CD8 T cells (55). Contraction and generation of memory CD8 T cells result in memory cells that maintain high levels of expression of CD44 but only a percentage of them (approximately 30%) bind HA (54).
The effect of HA and HA fragments on macrophages and dendritic cells.
| Cell type | HA size (kDa) | HA source | Effect | Molecule | Steps to exclude LPS | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMDM | 40–80 | Bovine trachea | Induced IL-1β, TNFα mRNA | CD44 | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse | ( |
| BMDM and MH-S cell line | 6000 | Rooster comb | No effect | – | Not specified | ( |
| 474, 267 | Sonicated | Activated NFκβ | ||||
| MH-S cell line and human inflammatory alveolar Mϕ | 6000 | Rooster comb | No effect | CD44 | Endotoxin tested, polymyxin added | ( |
| 470 | Sonicated | Induced MIP1α, MIP1β, IP-10, RANTES, MCP-1 mRNA in mouse and IL-8 in human | ||||
| 280 | Human umbilical cord | |||||
| 35 | ||||||
| 6 mer | Rooster comb | |||||
| 2 mer | Not specified | No effect | ||||
| MH-S cell line, BMDM | 200 | Human umbilical cord | Induced iNOS mRNA | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse, polymyxin added | ( | |
| Activated NFκβ | ||||||
| Elicited peritoneal Mϕ | 280 | Human umbilical cord | MIP1α, MIP1β, RANTES, IL-12 mRNA | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse, endotoxin present, polymyxin added | ( | |
| Peritoneal Mϕ | 135 | Digested from bacterial HA | Induced MIP-2 and TNFα | TLR2 | CD44, TLR2/4 KO mice. Endotoxin tested (<40 pg/mg HA), Hyal digestion, polymyxin added | ( |
| TLR4 | ||||||
| 200 | Patient serum | Induced MIP-2, MIP1α, KC | Not CD44 | |||
| Elicited peritoneal Mϕ | 6000 | Rooster comb | No effect | – | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse, endotoxin tested solutions, polymyxin added | ( |
| 200 | Human umbilical cord | Induced MIP1α, MIP1β, KC, MCP-1, RANTES, TNFα mRNA | TLR2 | |||
| MH-S cell line and human THP-1 cell line | Not specified | Human umbilical cord | Induced MIP-2, TNF α, GM-csf, RANTES IL-1α, and | CD44 | Endotoxin removed, DNA free | ( |
| TLR4 | ||||||
| MH-S cell line and elicited peritoneal Mϕ | 200 | Human umbilical cord | Induced TNFα and KC secretion | – | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse | ( |
| MH-S cell line and elicited peritoneal Mϕ | 500–730 | Rooster comb | No effect | CD44 | Used a LPS hyporesponsive mouse, Hyal digestion, endotoxin removal | ( |
| Up to 500 | Human umbilical cord | Induced MIP-2 and pro-IL-1β via TLR4. Induced IL-1β via CD44, Hyals and NLRP3 | TLR4 | |||
| NLRP3 | ||||||
| 4–18 mers | Not specified | Induced MIP-2 | ||||
| Raw264 and MH-S cell line | Specific sizes 11–970 | Acid hydrolysis of bacterial HA | No effect on NO or TNFα | – | Endotoxin tested <0.01 EU/ml | ( |
| BMDC, human blood-derived DCs | 1000 | Rooster comb, sonicated | No effect | – | Endotoxin tested (<0.06 EU/ml or <0.1 ng/ml LPS), polymyxin added | ( |
| 80–200 | ||||||
| 4–14 mers | Hyal digestion of sonicated HA | Induced HLR-DR expression and IL-1β, TNFα, IL-12. Activated NFκβ. Activated MAPK/p38 and NFκβ | TLR4 not CD44 or RHAMM | |||
| BMDC | >570 | Not specified | Upregulated CD40, CD80, CD86 | Not CD44 | Polymyxin added | ( |
| BMDC | 200 | Human umbilical cord | Induced MIP1α | Used LPS hyporesponsive mouse, polymyxin added | ( | |
| BMDC | 2–12 mers | Commercial source | Unable to activate DCs | – | – | ( |
All cells are murine unless otherwise stated.
BMDM and BMDC, bone marrow-derived macrophages and dendritic cells, respectively; Mϕ, macrophages; Hyal, hyaluronidase. MIP-2 and KC are also known as CXCL2 and CXCL1, respectively.
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Figure 3The various receptors implicated in mediating the proinflammatory signals induced by HA fragments. From the left, HA fragments ranging from 500 kDa and below have been reported to stimulate proinflammatory cytokine production via TLR4 alone, TLR2 alone, both TLR2 and TLR4, a complex of TLR4 involving CD44, or via TLR4- and CD44-mediated uptake that leads to inflammasome activation (110–114). In the first three panels, the TLRs signal via MyD88 to activate NF-κB and induce proinflammatory cytokine gene expression. In the fourth panel, CD44, together with TLR4 and MD-2, is needed for HA-stimulated proinflammatory cytokine production. In the fifth panel, TLR4 signals via MyD88 to produce pro-IL-1β and the uptake of HA via CD44 leads to the breakdown of HA which, through some unknown mechanism, leads to HA oligomers in the cytoplasm and these trigger NLRP3 inflammasome activation. This leads to cleavage of pro-IL-1β and the generation of IL-1β (114).