MicroRNA-223 Dampens Pulmonary Inflammation during Pneumococcal Pneumonia.
Cengiz GoekeriPeter PennitzWibke GroenewaldUlrike BehrendtHolger KirstenChristian M ZobelSarah BergerGitta A HeinzMir-Farzin MashreghiSandra-Maria WienholdKristina DietertAnca DorhoiAchim D GruberMarkus ScholzGernot G U RohdeNorbert Suttorpnull Capnetz Study GroupMartin WitzenrathGeraldine NouaillesPublished in: Cells (2023)
Community-acquired pneumonia remains a major contributor to global communicable disease-mediated mortality. Neutrophils play a leading role in trying to contain bacterial lung infection, but they also drive detrimental pulmonary inflammation, when dysregulated. Here we aimed at understanding the role of microRNA-223 in orchestrating pulmonary inflammation during pneumococcal pneumonia. Serum microRNA-223 was measured in patients with pneumococcal pneumonia and in healthy subjects. Pulmonary inflammation in wild-type and microRNA-223-knockout mice was assessed in terms of disease course, histopathology, cellular recruitment and evaluation of inflammatory protein and gene signatures following pneumococcal infection. Low levels of serum microRNA-223 correlated with increased disease severity in pneumococcal pneumonia patients. Prolonged neutrophilic influx into the lungs and alveolar spaces was detected in pneumococci-infected microRNA-223-knockout mice, possibly accounting for aggravated histopathology and acute lung injury. Expression of microRNA-223 in wild-type mice was induced by pneumococcal infection in a time-dependent manner in whole lungs and lung neutrophils. Single-cell transcriptome analyses of murine lungs revealed a unique profile of antimicrobial and cellular maturation genes that are dysregulated in neutrophils lacking microRNA-223. Taken together, low levels of microRNA-223 in human pneumonia patient serum were associated with increased disease severity, whilst its absence provoked dysregulation of the neutrophil transcriptome in murine pneumococcal pneumonia.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- community acquired pneumonia
- oxidative stress
- wild type
- pulmonary hypertension
- genome wide
- end stage renal disease
- gene expression
- chronic kidney disease
- staphylococcus aureus
- newly diagnosed
- type diabetes
- lps induced
- adipose tissue
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- peritoneal dialysis
- cardiovascular disease
- inflammatory response
- risk factors
- case report
- transcription factor
- protein protein
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- patient reported
- genome wide identification