| Literature DB >> 32185174 |
Jie Dong1.
Abstract
Carbon nanotube (CNT)-induced pulmonary inflammation and fibrosis have been intensively observed and characterized in numerous animal studies in the past decade. Remarkably, CNT-induced fibrotic lesions highly resemble some human fibrotic lung diseases, such as IPF and pneumoconiosis, regarding disease development and pathological features. This notion leads to a serious concern over the health impact of CNTs in exposed human populations, considering the rapidly expanding production of CNT materials for diverse industrial and commercial applications, and meanwhile provides the rationale for exploring CNT-induced pathologic effects in the lung. Accumulating mechanistic understanding of CNT lung pathology at the systemic, cellular, and molecular levels has demonstrated the potential of using CNT-exposed animals as a new disease model for the studies on inflammation, fibrosis, and the interactions between these two disease states. Tissue microenvironment plays critical roles in maintaining homeostasis and physiological functions of organ systems. When aberrant microenvironment forms under intrinsic or extrinsic stimulation, tissue abnormality, organ dysfunction, and pathological outcomes are induced, resulting in disease development. In this article, the cellular and molecular alterations that are induced in tissue microenvironment and implicated in the initiation and progression of inflammation and fibrosis in CNT-exposed lungs, including effector cells, soluble mediators, and functional events exemplified by cell differentiation and extracellular matrix (ECM) modification, are summarized and discussed. This analysis would provide new insights into the mechanistic understanding of lung inflammation and fibrosis induced by CNTs, as well as the development of CNT-exposed animals as a new model for human lung diseases.Entities:
Keywords: carbon nanotube; effector cell; extracellular matrix; fibrosis; inflammation; soluble factor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32185174 PMCID: PMC7059188 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00126
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Integrated perspective of microenvironmental mechanisms in CNT-exposed rodent lungs. Enriched numbers of neutrophils and M1 macrophages and elevated levels of pro-inflammatory factors are hallmarks of acute inflammation induced by CNTs during early acute phase response. In contrast, promoted by certain alarmins produced by injured epithelial cells, Th2-driven type 2 immune response and fibrotic response are predominant during late acute phase response and chronic phase response, marked by increased type 2 immune cells, type 2 mediators, fibroblastic cells, and ECM production and remodeling in the lung exposed to CNTs. These induced cells, mediators, and events underlie the initiation and progression of CNT-induced inflammation and fibrosis in the lung.
CNT-induced pathological factors in rodent lungs.
| Group | Molecule | CNT | Animal | Sample | Method | References |
| Pro-inflammatory cytokine and chemokine | TNF-α | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse, rat | BAL | ELISA, MIA | |
| IL-1α | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA, MIA | ||
| IL-1β | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | ||
| IL-6 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA, MIA | ||
| IL-12 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA, MIA | ||
| IFN-γ | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | ||
| CCL2 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA, MIA | ||
| CCL3 | SWCNT | Rat | BAL | MIA | ||
| CXCL1 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | MIA | ||
| CXCL9 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | MIA | ||
| Type 2 cytokine and mediator | IL-4 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC, IF | |
| IL-13 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC, IF | ||
| IL-5 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA, MIA | ||
| TGF-β1 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse, rat | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC, IB | ||
| PDGF-A | MWCNT | Mouse, rat | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC | ||
| IL-10 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | ||
| CCL11 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC | ||
| CHIA | MWCNT | Mouse | Tissue | IHC, IB | ||
| TIMP1 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC, IF | ||
| OPN | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse, rat | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC, IF, IB | ||
| MMP12 | SWCNT | Mouse, rat | Tissue | IHC | ||
| ECM protein | Collagens | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse, rat | Tissue | MTS, PSRS, SSCA, HYPA | |
| Collagen I | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | Tissue | IHC, IF | ||
| Collagen III | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse, rat | Tissue | IHC | ||
| Fibronectin | MWCNT | Mouse | Tissue | IHC, IF, IB | ||
| Alarmin | IL-25 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | |
| IL-33 | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL, tissue | ELISA, IHC | ||
| TSLP | MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | ||
| HMGB1 | SWCNT, MWCNT | Mouse | BAL | ELISA | ||
FIGURE 2Soluble factor-activated signaling pathways in fibroblastic cells in CNT-exposed mouse lungs. Certain pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic mediator-regulated signaling pathways, including the canonical NF-κB pathway, the canonical, Smad-dependent TGF-β pathway, and the ERK signaling, have been reported to be activated in fibroblastic cells in CNT-exposed lungs. These pathways exert crucial functions in promoting the development of fibrosis induced by CNTs. They demonstrate the activities and roles of fibroblasts and myofibroblasts, as well as the connections between immune factors and fibrosis development, in the lung under CNT exposure.