Chao He1, A Brent Carter1,2. 1. Department of MedicineUniversity of Alabama at BirminghamBirmingham, Alabamaand. 2. Birmingham VA Medical CenterBirmingham, Alabama.
Pulmonary fibrosis (PF) is a class of diseases with aberrant
scarring of the lung tissue that leads to progressive loss of function. The most common
form, idiopathic PF (IPF), has a high mortality and limited treatment options.
Historically, PF was thought of as a chronic inflammation–driven condition, as
multiple proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines are found to be elevated in subjects
with PF and in experimental animal models (1).
However, the PANTHER (Prednisone, Azathioprine, and N-acetylcysteine)
trial, which used antiinflammatory and immunosuppressive medications to treat IPF,
failed to improve physiological parameters, and in fact led to increased mortality and
hospitalizations in the treatment group (2).
Clearly, there are still many gaps in our knowledge regarding the observed elevated
inflammatory markers, their biological properties, and their potential as therapeutic
targets.CCL2 and its receptor, CCR2, are among the most extensively studied pairs of chemokines
and receptors in PF. Elevated CCL2 has been found in BAL fluid and serum samples from
subjects with IPF (3, 4). Moreover, alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) within fibrotic
areas were reported to have augmented CCL2 expression in subjects with IPF (5). In animal models of PF, CCL12, the analog of
CCL2 in humans (6), was found to be elevated in
lung tissue of mice developing fibrosis, and CCR2−/− mice were
shown to be protected from developing PF (3,
7). The data on
CCL2−/− mice are inconclusive, as Baran and colleagues
found that CCL2−/− mice were protected when they used a
peritoneal bleomycin administration model, but in an FITC intratracheal installation
model the CCL2−/− mice were not protected (3, 8). The
biological relevance of the increased levels of CCL2 has been proposed to arise from its
ability to recruit a group of profibrotic cells, termed fibrocytes, that express CD45
and mesenchymal collagen I (9). Despite the
abundant observational and preclinical data, a clinical trial using a monoclonal
antibody to CCL2 failed to show any protective effects of neutralizing CCL2 in subjects
with IPF, and was stopped prematurely owing to a greater loss in forced vital capacity
in the treatment group, although the overall mortality was not different compared with
placebo (10). Unexpectedly, subjects who
received the CCL2 monoclonal antibody actually had higher total and free CCL2 in their
serum than the placebo-treated subjects. This paradoxical observation gave rise to a
theory that a compensatory mechanism may exist in the presence of CCL2 blockade. In
addition, global CCL2 blockade could be deleterious, as CCL2 might work in other
important antifibrotic pathways that remain to be determined. A recent paper showed that
one target of CCL2 is CCR2+CD4+ T cells (11). These T cells function similarly to
regulatory T cells and were found to exert an antifibrotic effect in an experimental
animal model.In a study presented in this issue of the Journal, Yang and colleagues
(pp. 622–632) generated both CCL12 global knockout mice and a
conditional CCL12 deletion in AECs (12). The
authors compared CCR2 ligand expression in these mice using a bleomycin-injury model.
They found that CCL12 global knockout in mice led to a compensatory elevation of CCL2
and CCL7 in lung tissue and BAL fluid compared with wild-type mice. Furthermore, the
CCL12 global knockout mice were not protected from developing fibrosis, suggesting that
other CCR2 ligands have an equally important role in fibrosis. In contrast, the
conditional AEC CCL12 knockout mice (driven by SPC-rtTA/tetO-Cre promoter) were
protected. CCL2 and CCL7 levels in lung tissue and BAL fluid did not differ from those
observed in control mice after bleomycin injury. Because CCL2 is known to be highly
expressed in AECs of subjects with IPF, these data suggest that CCL12 expression plays
an important role during fibrogenesis, and that the selective deletion of CCL12 in AEC
may serve as a potential target for intervention.Mechanistically, the authors propose that AEC-derived CCL12 recruits exudate macrophages,
and deletion of CCL12 leads to reduced exudative macrophage recruitment to the lung
after bleomycin injury. In addition, CCL2 and CCL12 activated mTOR, and inhibition of
mTOR with a chemical inhibitor (torin) or silencing of an mTORC1 component, raptor,
reduced CCL2 and CCL12 production in epithelial cells; however, the involvement of mTOR
was not determined in vivo. A previous study in
CCL2−/− mice showed a reduced number of macrophages after
bleomycin administration (3). Given recent
studies demonstrating that monocyte-derived macrophages promote fibrosis progression
(7, 13, 14), it is not surprising that
exudate macrophages (defined in this article as SiglecF−
CD11c+autofluorescent+) were reduced in mice
harboring a conditional deletion of CCL12 in AECs.Although the study by Yang and colleagues provides new evidence that conditional knockout
of CCL12 in AECs can protect mice from PF, many questions remain unanswered. The
biological properties of exudate macrophages need to be further defined by gene
expression profiling or transcriptome analysis to verify that these cells are indeed
profibrotic. It has been reported that mTORC1 regulates CCL2 production by activating
the transcription factor FOXK1 in HeLa cells, and increasing CCL2 production leads to
augmented recruitment of tumor-associated macrophages, which share many similarities
with profibrotic macrophages (15). Although the
data presented by Yang and colleagues show inhibition of the mTOR pathway with torin
(which inhibits both mTORC1 and mTORC2) or raptor shRNA (mTORC1 complex), it is unclear
whether mTORC2 (rictor) also contributes to the regulation of CCL2 production in AECs.
The PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway is an important regulator of cell senescence, which is a
cardinal feature of IPF (16). It is unclear
whether changes in CCL2 production have any effects on cell senescence, proliferation,
or survival. AECs from CCR2−/− mice exposed to bleomycin have
increased caspase 3 activity (7); however, it is
critical to determine whether the conditional deletion of CCL12 in AECs attenuates
apoptosis, as these mice are protected from PF.In this study, Yang and colleagues are the first to generate complete and AEC-specific
CCL12 knockout mice and to characterize their role in PF. Their transgenic mice have the
potential to become a powerful tool in future research assessing the role of chemokines
in PF and whether we can target this pathway for drug development. This article also
highlights a new population of cells, exudate macrophages, that CCL12 targets to provide
additional information about the vital role of macrophages in fibrogenesis.
Authors: Christopher P Baran; Judy M Opalek; Sara McMaken; Christie A Newland; James M O'Brien; Melissa G Hunter; Benjamin D Bringardner; Martha M Monick; David R Brigstock; Paul C Stromberg; Gary W Hunninghake; Clay B Marsh Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2007-04-12 Impact factor: 21.405
Authors: Bethany B Moore; Lynne Murray; Anuk Das; Carol A Wilke; Amy B Herrygers; Galen B Toews Journal: Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol Date: 2006-03-16 Impact factor: 6.914
Authors: Paul F Mercer; Robin H Johns; Chris J Scotton; Malvina A Krupiczojc; Melanie Königshoff; David C J Howell; Robin J McAnulty; Anuk Das; Andrew J Thorley; Terry D Tetley; Oliver Eickelberg; Rachel C Chambers Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2008-12-05 Impact factor: 21.405
Authors: Jibing Yang; Manisha Agarwal; Song Ling; Seagal Teitz-Tennenbaum; Rachel L Zemans; John J Osterholzer; Thomas H Sisson; Kevin K Kim Journal: Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol Date: 2020-05 Impact factor: 7.748
Authors: Jennifer L Larson-Casey; Mudit Vaid; Linlin Gu; Chao He; Guo-Qiang Cai; Qiang Ding; Dana Davis; Taylor F Berryhill; Landon S Wilson; Stephen Barnes; Jeffrey D Neighbors; Raymond J Hohl; Kurt A Zimmerman; Bradley K Yoder; Ana Leda F Longhini; Vidya Sagar Hanumanthu; Ranu Surolia; Veena B Antony; A Brent Carter Journal: J Clin Invest Date: 2019-11-01 Impact factor: 19.456
Authors: Alexander V Misharin; Luisa Morales-Nebreda; Paul A Reyfman; Carla M Cuda; James M Walter; Alexandra C McQuattie-Pimentel; Ching-I Chen; Kishore R Anekalla; Nikita Joshi; Kinola J N Williams; Hiam Abdala-Valencia; Tyrone J Yacoub; Monica Chi; Stephen Chiu; Francisco J Gonzalez-Gonzalez; Khalilah Gates; Anna P Lam; Trevor T Nicholson; Philip J Homan; Saul Soberanes; Salina Dominguez; Vince K Morgan; Rana Saber; Alexander Shaffer; Monique Hinchcliff; Stacy A Marshall; Ankit Bharat; Sergejs Berdnikovs; Sangeeta M Bhorade; Elizabeth T Bartom; Richard I Morimoto; William E Balch; Jacob I Sznajder; Navdeep S Chandel; Gökhan M Mutlu; Manu Jain; Cara J Gottardi; Benjamin D Singer; Karen M Ridge; Neda Bagheri; Ali Shilatifard; G R Scott Budinger; Harris Perlman Journal: J Exp Med Date: 2017-07-10 Impact factor: 14.307
Authors: Anna J Podolanczuk; Alyson W Wong; Shigeki Saito; Joseph A Lasky; Christopher J Ryerson; Oliver Eickelberg Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med Date: 2021-06-01 Impact factor: 21.405