| Literature DB >> 29599964 |
Xin Zhou1,2, Zhongguang Li1, Zefan Wang1, Eda Chen3, Juan Wang1, Frederic Chen4, Odell Jones5, Tao Tan2, Shawn Chen4, Hiroshi Takeshima6, Joseph Bryant7, Jianjie Ma2, Xuehong Xu1.
Abstract
Macrophages are traditionally viewed as a key component of the immunity defense system. Recent studies have identified resident macrophages in multiple organs including the heart, in which the cells perform their crucial role on tissue repair after myocardial infarction (MI). The cardiac-specific macrophages interdigitate with cardiomyocytes particularly at the atrioventricular node region. The integrative communication between macrophage and cardiomyocytes can modulate the contractile function of the heart. Coordinated control of intracellular calcium signaling and intercellular electrical conduction via the syncytium network underlie the synchronized beating of the heart. In this review article, we introduce the concept the syncytium calcium signaling in the cardiomyocytes can modulate gene expression in the resident macrophages and their integration with the cardiomyocytes. The cardiac macrophages originate from bone marrow stem cells, migrate to local via vessel, and settle down as a naturalization process in heart. As the macrophages perform on regulating electrical conduction, and accomplish post MI non-scared completed regeneration or partial regeneration with fibrotic scar at different stage of postnatal development, we understand that multiple functions of cardiac macrophage should carry on with diverse linages. The naturalization process in heart of macrophages to the cardiomyocytes serves important roles to control of electrical signaling and calcium-dependent contractile function of the heart.Entities:
Keywords: Calcium dependency; Colony-stimulating factors (CSF); Electrical connection; Macrophage; Mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS)
Year: 2018 PMID: 29599964 PMCID: PMC5870344 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-018-0222-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 7.133
Fig. 1Sketch of the association between resident macrophage and cardiomyocytes in the heart. Cardiomyocytes are aligned longitudinally in the heart (a) with actin-myosin apparatus and carry contraction controlled by CICR (b). Resident macrophages are naturalized in cardiac tissue (c). Through connexin 43 and other integrated and extracellular matrix proteins, resident macrophages facilitate conducting cardiomyocytes and modify the action potential of cardiomyocytes (d)
Calcium related gene expression and macrophage functions
| # | Gene name | Functions of enconded gene | PubMed ID | Chromosome location | Transcript (bp) | CDS (bp) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MIP-1α | Activating inflammatory response | NM_002983.2 | Chr 17:36088256-36090160 | 813 | 279 | Provost et al. [ |
| 2 | MIP-1β | Activating inflammatory response | NM_002984.3 | Chr 17:36103827-36105621 | 667 | 279 | Provost et al. [ |
| 3 | Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) | Activation of TRPC6-dependent calcium signaling mediates endotoxin induced lung vascular permeability and inflammation | NM_021297.3 | Chr 9:117704175-117717491 | 5494 | 1920 | Tauseef et al. [ |
| 4 | STIM1 | Mediate extracellular Ca2+ entry | NM_001277961.1 | Chr 11:3855703-4093210 | 4380 | 2376 | Steinckwich et al. [ |
| 5 | Orai1 | Mediate extracellular Ca2+ entry | NM_032790.3 | Chr 12:121626550-121642040 | 1496 | 906 | Steinckwich et al. [ |
| 6 | S100A8 | As the site of interplay between extracellular Ca2+ entry and intraphagosomal ROS production | NM_001319197.1 | Chr 1:1533590032-153422583 | 546 | 351 | Steinckwich et al. [ |
| 7 | S100A9 | As the site of interplay between extracellular Ca2+ entry and intraphagosomal ROS production | NM_002965.3 | Chr 1:153357854-153361027 | 586 | 345 | Steinckwich et al. [ |
| 8 | Transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 (TRPV2) | Participation early phagocytosis and innate immunity | NM_016113.4 | Chr 17:16415542-16437003 | 2829 | 2295 | Link et al. [ |
| 9 | lL-10 | Activating immunoreaction | NM_000572.2 | Chr 1:206767603-206772494 | 1629 | 537 | Kelly et al. [ |
| C-type lectin receptor (CLR): Dectin-1 | Activation of phagocytosis and cytokine production | NM_197948.2 | Chr 12:10116777-10130269 | 2503 | 570 | Xu et al. [ | |
| 10 | Phospholipase Cγ2 | Promote Dectin-1-mediated Ca2+ flux and cytokine production | NM_002661.4 | Chr 16:81779258-81962693 | 8707 | 3798 | Xu et al. [ |
| 11 | Mammalian transient receptor potential protein 2 TRPM2 | Aggravates inflammation | NM_001320350.1 | Chr 21:44350112-44443081 | 6026 | 4662 | Yamamoto et al. [ |
| 12 | NFATl | Involved in the regulation of cytokine gene expression in T lymphocytes | NM_001291168.1 | Chr 2:168476410-168601657 | 6644 | 2724 | Savignac et al. [ |
| 13 | NFAT2 | Involved in the regulation of cytokine gene expression in T lymphocytes | NM_001278669.1 | Chr 18:79395772-79529323 | 5031 | 2832 | Savignac et al. [ |
| 14 | NFAT4 | Involved in the regulation of cytokine gene expression in T lymphocytes | NM_004555.3 | Chr 16:68085366-68229259 | 6453 | 3207 | Savignac et al. [ |
| 15 | MEF2D | Involved in the regulation of cytokine gene expression in T lymphocytes | NM_005920.3 | Chr 1:156463721-156500842 | 5996 | 4186 | Savignac et al. [ |
| 16 | DREAM | Involved in the regulation of cytokine gene expression in T lymphocytes | NM_013434.4 | Chr 2:95297324-95386077 | 2928 | 771 | Savignac et al. [ |
| 17 | IL-8 | Activating immunoreaction and proinflammatory | NM_001310420.1 | Chr Un: 2233607-2236704 | 1163 | 312 | Tran et al. [ |
| 18 | TLR (toll-like receptor)-5 | Activating immunoreaction | NM_016928.3 | Chr 1:223108401-223143282 | 4277 | 2577 | Tran et al. [ |
| 19 | β2 integrins | Mediate phagocytosis | NM_001303238.1 | Chr 21:44885949-44928873 | 2928 | 2103 | Tran et al. [ |
| 20 | P2Y2 | Elicit Ca2+ oscillations activating immunoreaction | NM_176072.2 | Chr 11:73200416-73246743 | 8736 | 1134 | Hanley et al. [ |
| 21 | P2X4 | ATP induced a transient depolarization activating immunoreaction | NM_001256796.1 | Chr 12:121209861-121234106 | 2091 | 1215 | Hanley et al. [ |
| 22 | ll-6 | Increased transcription of IL-6 activating immunoreaction | NM_000600.4 | Chr 7:22725889-22732002 | 1197 | 639 | Hanley et al. [ |
| 23 | PYK2 | Phosphorylation-proinflammatory | NM_001183767.3 | Chr XV: 984942-986462 | 1521 | 1521 | Cuschieri et al. [ |
| 24 | p38 | Translocation-proinflammatory | NM_001078490.1 | Chr 11:4821238-4824735 | 3582 | 1095 | Cuschieri et al. [ |
| 25 | NF-kappaB | Translocation-proinflammatory | NM_001319226.1 | Chr 4:102501329-102617302 | 3900 | 2907 | Cuschieri et al. [ |
| 26 | AP-1 | Nuclear translocation-proinflammatory | NM_001334400.1 | Chr 1:25982294-25986349 | 1557 | 705 | Cuschieri et al. [ |
| 27 | TNF-alpha | Upregulated-proinflammatory | NM_000594.3 | Chr 6: 31575567-31578336 | 1686 | 702 | Cuschieri et al. [ |
| 28 | ERK 1/2 | Phosphorylation-proinflammatory | * | Cuschieri et al. [ | |||
| 29 | 29 Fc receptor-lgG | Promote receptor-mediated phagocytosis | ** | Hishikawa et al. [ | |||
| 30 | Protein kinase C (PKC) | Promote nonspecific phagocytosis | *** | Hishikawa et al. [ |
* ERK 1/2 are not included as mutiple symbols (references: Cuschieri et al. [44])
** Fe receptor-lgG are not included as mutiple symbols (references: Hishikawa et al. [45])
*** Protein kinase C (PKC) are not included as mutiple symbols (references: Hishikawa et al. [45])