| Literature DB >> 26618160 |
Adhyatmika Adhyatmika1, Kurnia S S Putri2, Leonie Beljaars1, Barbro N Melgert3.
Abstract
Fibrotic diseases, especially of the liver, the cardiovascular system, the kidneys, and the lungs, account for approximately 45% of deaths in Western societies. Fibrosis is a serious complication associated with aging and/or chronic inflammation or injury and cannot be treated effectively yet. It is characterized by excessive deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins by myofibroblasts and impaired degradation by macrophages. This ultimately destroys the normal structure of an organ, which leads to loss of function. Most efforts to develop drugs have focused on inhibiting ECM production by myofibroblasts and have not yielded many effective drugs yet. Another option is to stimulate the cells that are responsible for degradation and uptake of excess ECM, i.e., antifibrotic macrophages. However, macrophages are plastic cells that have many faces in fibrosis, including profibrotic behavior-stimulating ECM production. This can be dependent on their origin, as the different organs have tissue-resident macrophages with different origins and a various influx of incoming monocytes in steady-state conditions and during fibrosis. To be able to pharmacologically stimulate the right kind of behavior in fibrosis, a thorough characterization of antifibrotic macrophages is necessary, as well as an understanding of the signals they need to degrade ECM. In this review, we will summarize the current state of the art regarding the antifibrotic macrophage phenotype and the signals that stimulate its behavior.Entities:
Keywords: MMP; antifibrotic; cathepsin K; fibrosis; macrophages; monocytes; polarization; resolution
Year: 2015 PMID: 26618160 PMCID: PMC4643133 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2015.00081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
An overview of the origins of macrophages in the different tissues.
| Tissue-resident macrophages | Embryonic progenitor | Adult hematopoietic stem cells | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yolk sac | Fetal liver monocytes | ||
| Spleen ( | √ | √ | |
| Pancreas ( | √ | √ | |
| Kidney( | √ | √ | |
| Brain (microglia) ( | √ | ||
| Heart ( | √ | √ | √ (small number) |
| Skin (Langerhans cells) ( | √ | ||
| Skin (dermal macrophages) ( | √ | ||
| Gut ( | √ | ||
| Lung (alveolar macrophages) ( | √ | ||
| Liver (Kupffer cell) ( | √ | √ | |
Origins of antifibrotic macrophages.
| Organ | Antifibrotic macrophages | |
|---|---|---|
| Tissue resident | Ly6C-lo-recruited monocyte | |
| Peritoneal | √ ( | √ ( |
| Lung | √ ( | √ ( |
| Liver (Kupffer cell) | √ ( | |
Markers of antifibrotic macrophages and potential therapeutic approaches inducing or attracting antifibrotic macrophages or inhibiting the recruitment of profibrotic monocytes.
| Markers | Prospective drug |
|---|---|
| TNF receptor ( | TNFα ( |
| CX3CR1 ( | RANKL ( |
| TNFα ( | PPARγ agonist ( |
| CXCL10 ( | IFNγ ( |
| CXCL9 ( | IFNα ( |
| MMP9 ( | Asprin-triggered lipoxin A analogs ( |
| MMP13 ( | CCL2 inhibitors ( |
| Cathepsin K ( | |
| MERTK( | |
| PPARγ ( | |
| MRC1 ( | |
| MRC2 ( | |
| MFGE8 ( | |
| Arg-1 ( | |
| FIZZ1 ( |
Figure 1Antifibrotic macrophages, derived from either embryonic tissue macrophages and/or Ly6C-lo monocytes, contribute to fibrosis resolution by expressing extracellular matrix (ECM)-degrading enzymes and receptors to take up pieces of degraded ECM and by expression of proteins that downregulate Th2-associated inflammation. These antifibrotic macrophages can be induced or attracted by a number of signals, such as cytokines, chemokines and growth factors. Abbreviations: MIF, macrophages migration inhibitory factor; CX3CR ligand 1, ligand for C–X3–C motif chemokine receptor 1; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; CXCL9 and -10, C–X–C motif chemokine ligand-9 and -10; RANKL, receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; TNFαR1/2, tumor necrosis factor receptor type 1 or 2; IFNγ, interferon γ; IFNα, interferon α; MMP9 and MMP13, matrix metalloproteinases 9 and 13; Mfge8, milk fat globule-EGF factor 8; MERTK, tyrosine-protein kinase Mer receptor; Mrc1 and Mrc2, mannose receptors 1 and 2; PPARγ, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ; Arg-1, arginase-1; FIZZ1, resistin-like molecule alpha 1; Th2, T helper 2 lymphocyted-mediated.