| Literature DB >> 28155642 |
Filippo Castiglione1, Paolo Tieri2, Alessandro Palma3, Abdul Salam Jarrah4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Macrophages cover a major role in the immune system, being the most plastic cell yielding several key immune functions.Entities:
Keywords: Agent-based modelling; Gene regulatory network; Macrophage differentiation; Multiscale modelling
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28155642 PMCID: PMC5260144 DOI: 10.1186/s12859-016-1363-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Fig. 1The gene regulatory network. A minimalistic gene regulatory networks of macrophage differentiation into the M1 and M2 subclasses. Signalling stimuli are “sensed” by membrane receptors that activate genes through the regulatory circuitry. Also see Table 1
Nodes of the network
| Input | Receptor | Internal nodes | Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LPS | TLR4 | NF-kB, NOS2 | M1 | [ |
| IFNg | IFNgR | STAT1, SOCS3, NOS2 | M1 | [ |
| IL-4 | IL-4Ra | STAT6, PPARg, | M2 | [ |
| SOCS1, KLF4, Arg1 | ||||
| IL-10 | IL-10R | STAT3 | M2 | [ |
Internal nodes means transducers/transcription factors/target genes
Cell states
| Cell type/state | Symbol |
|---|---|
| Macrophage resting or inactive |
|
| Macrophage active |
|
| Macrophage presenting the antigen |
|
| B-cell active |
|
| B-cell presenting the antigen |
|
| T-helper resting or inactive |
|
| T-helper active |
|
M indicates both type-1 and -2 macrophages. Likewise H indicates type-1, -2 and regulatory T hyper lymphocytes
Fig. 2M1-polarised response. Challenging the system with a Gram-negative bacteria the system responds with a M1/H1 polarised immune response. The top-left panel shows bacterial growth and antibody production; top-right panel shows production of IFNg cytokines as well as to a smaller extend IL-4 and no IL-10; bottom-left panel shows polarisation of helper T-cells to H 1; bottom-right panel shows polarisation of macrophages toward the M 1 phenotype
Fig. 3M2-polarised response. Here the system is challenged by a vaccine which does not include LPS as adjuvant (e.g., inactive gram positive bacteria). After a short while (after 3 days and for a whole week) we also inject the pro-M2 cytokines IL-4. In this case the M2-polarisation is shown in the bottom right panel, followed by a polarisation of T-helpers toward the H 2 phenotype
Fig. 4M2-polarised response. The effect of injecting IL-10 after a bacterial infection is clearly shown is panel a in two representative cases of possible outcome; in some cases (43% of total stochastic simulations performed) IL-10 dampens the immune response. Panel b shows the average population kinetics of the two macrophage sub-types as well as the injected IL-10 concentration (error-bars show standard deviation over a number of stochastic simulations). This plot demomstrates that IL-10 downregulates immune reponse by promoting M2 differentiation. Similarly, panel c shows T-helper cell sub-types