| Literature DB >> 33544156 |
Wan-Chi Lin1, Michael B Fessler2.
Abstract
The neutrophil, a short-lived effector leukocyte of the innate immune system best known for its proteases and other degradative cargo, has unique, reciprocal physiological interactions with the lung. During health, large numbers of 'marginated' neutrophils reside within the pulmonary vasculature, where they patrol the endothelial surface for pathogens and complete their life cycle. Upon respiratory infection, rapid and sustained recruitment of neutrophils through the endothelial barrier, across the extravascular pulmonary interstitium, and again through the respiratory epithelium into the airspace lumen, is required for pathogen killing. Overexuberant neutrophil trafficking to the lung, however, causes bystander tissue injury and underlies several acute and chronic lung diseases. Due in part to the unique architecture of the lung's capillary network, the neutrophil follows a microanatomic passage into the distal airspace unlike that observed in other end-organs that it infiltrates. Several of the regulatory mechanisms underlying the stepwise recruitment of circulating neutrophils to the infected lung have been defined over the past few decades; however, fundamental questions remain. In this article, we provide an updated review and perspective on emerging roles for the neutrophil in lung biology, on the molecular mechanisms that control the trafficking of neutrophils to the lung, and on past and ongoing efforts to design therapeutics to intervene upon pulmonary neutrophilia in lung disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acute lung injury; Acute respiratory distress syndrome; Granulocyte; Lung; Pneumonia; Polymorphonuclear leukocyte; Trafficking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33544156 PMCID: PMC7863617 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-021-03768-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Inhaled exposures eliciting alveolar neutrophil accumulation through CD18-dependent vs. CD18-independent mechanisms
| CD18-dependent stimuli | CD18-independent stimuli | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| [ | [ | ||
| [ | CXCL1 | [ | |
| [ | HCl (ipsilateral lung) | [ | |
| HCl (contralateral lung) | [ | [ | |
| IgG immune complexes | [ | Group B | [ |
| Hyperoxia | [ | ||
| IgG immune complexes | [ | ||
The cited reports measured alveolar neutrophilia in mice, rats, rabbits, or guinea pigs with either CD18 deletion (mice) or antibody neutralization of CD11 or CD18 β2-integrin components. Partial effects on neutrophilia using the latter method may not decisively distinguish between technical (i.e., dosing) and biological causes
**Partially CD18-dependent
Adhesion molecules that regulate neutrophil transendothelial migration
| Transendothelial migration | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PMN | endothelium | PMN-endothelium interaction site | Model | Ref | |
| CD11a/CD18 (LFA-1) | + | a | Apical, lateral | Primary cell | [ |
| CD11b/CD18 (Mac-1) | + | a | Apical, lateral | Primary cell | [ |
CD11c/CD18 (p150/95) | + | a | ND | Primary cell | [ |
| CD18-independent integrins | + | a | ND | Primary cell | [ |
| PECAM-1 (CD31) | – | +/–* | Lateral | Primary cell, peritonitis, dermatitis, pneumonia | [ |
| CD44 | + | +/– | ND | Cremaster muscle, peritonitis, dermatitis | [ |
| CD47 | + | + | Lateral | Primary cell, pneumonia | [ |
| ICAM-1 (CD54) | ? | + | Apical, lateral, basal | Primary cell | [ |
| CD55 | + | + | ND | Cell-free system, primary cell | [ |
| E-selectin (CD62E) | a | +/– | Apical | Primary cell, peritonitis, lung inflammation, lung injury, pneumonia | [ |
| P-selectin (CD62P) | a | +/– | Apical | Peritonitis, lung inflammation, lung injury, pneumonia | [ |
| L-selectin (CD62L) | + | a | Apical | Primary cell, cremaster muscle, peritonitis, lung inflammation, lung injury, pneumonia | [ |
| CD99 | +/– | + | Lateral | Primary cell, cremaster muscle, peritonitis | [ |
| ICAM-2 (CD102) | ? | + | Apical, lateral | Cremaster muscle, peritonitis | [ |
| VCAM-1 (CD106) | a | + | Apical | Primary cell | [ |
| PSGL-1 (CD162) | + | ? | Apical | Intestine, cremaster muscle, peritonitis, lung inflammation | [ |
| JAM-A (CD321) | + | +/– | Lateral or interaction- independent | Primary cell, peritonitis, cremaster muscle, cardiac ischemia reperfusion | [ |
| JAM-C (CD323) | a | + | Lateral | Primary cell, peritonitis, cremaster muscle | [ |
| ESAM | a | + | Lateral | Cremaster muscle, peritonitis | [ |
| RAGE | ? | + | ND | Cremaster muscle, peritonitis | [ |
| Dipeptidase-1 | a | + | Apical | Systemic inflammation | [ |
| Carbohydrate | + | + | Apical, lateral | Primary cell, cremaster muscle, peritonitis, dermatitis, hepatitis | [ |
| Heparanase | ? | + | Interaction- independent | Lung injury | [ |
| MIF | ? | + | Interaction- independent | Lung injury | [ |
+ molecule expressed, regulates transmigration, – molecule expressed, does not regulate transmigration, ? molecule expressed, role undefined, ND not determined
*Not involved in transendothelial migration within lung [128]
aDenote no or limited available evidence for expression in the indicated cell type
Fig. 1Transpithelial migration of neutrophils into the airspace. The transepithelial passage of neutrophils (PMNs) from the pulmonary interstitium into the airspace involves the sequential steps of adhesion, paracellular migration, and post-migration adhesion/detachment, as illustrated. Initial adhesive events of PMNs with the basal aspect of epithelial cells may be regulated by PMN CD11b/CD18 interactions with fucosylated proteins and other poorly characterized molecules. Paracellular migration involves serial interactions of PMNs with epithelial junctional proteins, as shown. Finally, apical adhesion is thought to regulate PMN antimicrobial and migratory functions in the airspace and, potentially, to provide positive feedback signals that augment further PMN entry into the paracellular space. The degree to which specific epithelial adhesion proteins are presented by alveolar epithelial type 1 (AT1) vs. AT2 cells is unclear. As discussed in the text, the contribution of some of the adhesion molecules depicted to PMN transepithelial migration in the lung has been largely extrapolated from studies conducted in intestinal systems. Molecules shown in the red font have been confirmed to regulate PMN transepithelial migration in the lungs
Adhesion molecules that regulate neutrophil transepithelial migration
| Transepithelial migration | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PMN | Lung epithelium | PMN-epithelium interaction site | Model | Ref | PMN | Intestinal epithelium | PMN-epithelium interaction site | Model | Ref | |
| CD11a/CD18 (LFA-1) | +/– | a | ND | Cell line, primary cell | [ | – | a | ND | Cell line | [ |
| CD11b/CD18 (Mac-1) | + | a | Basal, lateral | Cell line, primary cell | [ | + | a | Basal, lateral, apical | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ |
| CD11c/CD18 (p150/95) | +/– | a | ND | Cell line, primary cell | [ | – | a | ND | Cell line | [ |
| CD18-independent integrins | +* | a | ND | Cell line, lung inflammation | [ | + | a | Basal, lateral | Cell line | [ |
| CD44 | + | ? | ND | Cell-free system, pneumonia, lung injury | [ | + | – | ND | Cell-free system, cell line | [ |
| CD44v6 | a | ? | Expressed basolaterally | [ | a | + | Apical | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ | |
| CD47 | + | ? | ND | Pneumonia | [ | + | +/– | Lateral | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ |
| ICAM-1 (CD54) | ? | + | ND | Cell line, primary cell | [ | ? | + | Apical | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ |
| CD55 | + | + | ND | Cell-free system, cell line | [ | + | + | Apical | Cell-free system, cell line | [ |
| CD172α (SIRPα) | ? | a | ND | [ | + | a | Lateral | Cell line | [ | |
| JAM-A (CD321) | ? | + | ND | Lung injury | [ | – | +/– | Interaction- independent | Cell line, intestinal loop, peritonitis | [ |
| JAM-C (CD323) | a | ? | ND | [ | a | + | Lateral | Cell line | [ | |
| TREM-1 (CD354) | + | ? | ND | Primary cell, pneumonia | [ | ? | a | ND | [ | |
| JAM-L | ? | a | ND | [ | + | a | Lateral | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ | |
| CAR | a | + | Lateral | Primary cell, lung inflammation | [ | a | + | Lateral | Cell line | [ |
| RAGE | ? | ? | Expressed basally | [ | ? | + | Lateral | Cell line | [ | |
| EMP2 | a | + | ND | Cell line, lung inflammation, pneumonia | [ | a | a | ND | ||
| Carbohydrate | ? | ? | ND | [ | + | + | Basal, lateral, apical | Cell line, intestinal loop | [ | |
+ molecule expressed, regulates transmigration, – molecule expressed, does not regulate transmigration, ? molecule expressed, role undefined, ND not determined
*CD29/CD49 [111]
aDenote no or limited available evidence for expression in the indicated cell type
| What are the local niche signals in the lung that sequentially program the tissue-compartmental localization and function of PMNs during pneumonia and its resolution? |
| Do pulmonary interstitial fibroblasts directly and/or indirectly regulate the transendothelial and transepithelial passage of PMNs in the lung? |
| Are there distinct subsets of PMNs that subserve destructive, antimicrobial, and repair roles in the lung? |
| How do intrapulmonary PMNs and the lung microbiota reciprocally interact during health and chronic lung disease? |
| Are there therapeutic strategies that can be leveraged to selectively intervene upon PMN traffic to the lung in isolation from other organs? |
| Are there molecular strategies that can be leveraged to selectively manipulate PMN number within the pulmonary intravascular, interstitial, and intra-alveolar compartments? |
| What is the relative importance of interstitial vs. intra-alveolar PMNs to host defense during pneumonia? |
| How does transepithelial traffic of PMNs impact intrapulmonary compartmentalization and clearance of pathogens during pneumonia? |
| What role does efferocytic clearance of apoptotic PMNs play in pathogen killing in the infected lung? |