| Literature DB >> 28476751 |
Melissa B McPeak1, Dima Youssef1, Danielle A Williams2, Christopher L Pritchett2, Zhi Q Yao1, Charles E McCall3, Mohamed El Gazzar4.
Abstract
Sepsis inflammation accelerates myeloid cell generation to compensate for rapid mobilization of the myeloid progenitors from bone marrow. This inflammation-driven myelopoiesis, however, generates myeloid progenitors with immunosuppressive functions that are unable to differentiate into mature, innate immune cells. The myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) expand markedly in the later phases of sepsis, suppress both innate and adaptive immunity, and thus, elevate mortality. Using a murine model with myeloid-restricted deletion of the C/EBPβ transcription factor, we show that sepsis-induced generation of MDSCs depends on C/EBPβ. C/EBPβ myeloid cell-deficient mice did not generate MDSCs or develop immunosuppression and survived sepsis. However, septic mice still generated Gr1+CD11b+ myeloid progenitors at the steady-state levels similar to the control sham mice, suggesting that C/EBPβ is not involved in healthy, steady-state myelopoiesis. C/EBPβ-deficient Gr1+CD11b+ cells generated fewer monocyte- and granulocyte-like colonies than control mice did, indicating reduced proliferation potential, but differentiated normally in response to growth factors. Adoptive transfer of C/EBPβ-deficient Gr1+CD11b+ cells from late septic mice exacerbated inflammation in control mice undergoing early sepsis, confirming they were not immunosuppressive. These results show that C/EBPβ directs a switch from proinflammatory to repressor myeloid cells and identifies a novel treatment target. © Society for Leukocyte Biology.Entities:
Keywords: MDSC; immune suppression; inflammation; microRNA; sepsis
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28476751 PMCID: PMC5505744 DOI: 10.1189/jlb.4HI1216-537R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Leukoc Biol ISSN: 0741-5400 Impact factor: 4.962