| Literature DB >> 32351318 |
Jiajie Tu1, Xinming Wang1, Xun Gong1, Wenming Hong1, Dafei Han1, Yilong Fang1, Yawei Guo1, Wei Wei1.
Abstract
The ontogeny of macrophages in most organs has already been established. Owing to the limited number and inaccessibility of synovial macrophages (SMs), the origin of SMs has not been fully elucidated. Previous studies suggested that SMs have two major origins, namely, tissue-resident and monocyte-derived SMs. However, no systematic analysis to identify SM ontology in either physiological or pathological conditions has been available to date. In this review, we summarize relevant studies on the two main origins of SMs in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and forecast the future research directions for this field. Furthermore, we discuss the current state of RA therapy that is based on targeting different SM subsets.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32351318 PMCID: PMC7174945 DOI: 10.1155/2020/1583647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
The functions of SMs in RA synovium.
| Cell type | Mediator | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Polarization | ||
| SMs (M1) | TF and pathway: STAT1, IRF5, SOCS1, NF- | Proinflammation; glycolysis; iron retention |
| Cytokine: IL-1 | ||
| Chemokine: CXCL9/10/11, CCL5 | ||
| Surface marker: MHCII | ||
| SMs (M2) | TF and pathway: STAT6, IRF4, SOCS3, KLF4, c-Myc | Anti-inflammation; oxidative phosphorylation; iron export |
| Cytokine: IL-4, IL-10 | ||
| Chemokine: CCL17/22 | ||
| Surface marker:CD206, CD163,MGL | ||
| Cell-cell communications | ||
| Synovial fibroblasts (SF) | IL-1 | SMs promote SF proliferation. |
| Osteoclasts | IL-1 | SMs promote osteoclasts activation. |
| Monocytes | IL-1 | SMs recruit monocytes. |
| Neutrophils | IL-1 | SMs recruit neutrophils. |
| T cells (Th1 cells) | TNF- | SMs promote Th1 polarization. |
| T cells (Th17 cells) | IL-23 | SMs promote Th17 polarization. |
| B cells | Immune complex and autoantibody | B cells activate SMs. |
Figure 1The markers comparison of resident SMs and bone marrow-derived SMs. (a) Resident SM markers include Z39Ig, CD68, CD163, MerTK, 25F9, F4/80, and ED2/3 (rat); (b) Bone marrow-derived SM markers include CD16, CD11b, CD14, MRP8/14, CCR2, Ly6C, MMR, MPO, lysozyme, and ED1 (rat). Up to now, these are several regulatory agents of resident SMs (SIN) and bone marrow-derived SMs. (NFAT5, Sirt6, miR-146a, MRP8/14, and Withaferin-A).
Figure 2The heterogeneity of SMs in RA was discovered by single cell sequencing. (a) Accelerating Medicines Partnership Rheumatoid (AMPR) Arthritis consortium identified the unique activation states of synovial monocytes as four subsets: IL1β+ proinflammatory monocytes (M1), NUPR1+ monocytes (M2) with a mixture of leukocyte-poor RA cells, C1QA+ (M3), and IFN-activated monocytes (M4) by scRNA-seq analysis. (b) HBEGF+ inflammatory SMs are enriched in RA tissues and are shaped by FLS. These SMs promoted fibroblast invasiveness in an EGFR-dependent manner, indicating that intercellular cross talk in this inflamed setting reshapes both cell types and contributes to FLS-mediated cartilage and bone erosion. (c) Culemann et al. found that certain SMs form a cell layer that protects joints from the inflammatory immune-cell attacks on bone and cartilage. This barrier is formed in the lining layer (next to FLS). The barrier-forming SMs express proteins associated with a type of barrier-forming epithelial cell, and these proteins form structures called tight junctions. Barrier-forming SMs arise from a type of macrophage called an interstitial macrophage, which resides in the sublining layer. By contrast, nonresident macrophages enter the joint from blood vessels. These cells, which can drive inflammation, arise from monocytes.