Tissue-resident macrophages exacerbate lung injury after remote sterile damage.
Hanhui ZhongJingjing JiJinling ZhuangZiying XiongPengyun XieXiaolei LiuJundi ZhengWangli TianXiaoyang HongLiangqing ZhangPublished in: Cellular & molecular immunology (2024)
Remote organ injury, which is a common secondary complication of sterile tissue damage, is a major cause of poor prognosis and is difficult to manage. Here, we report the critical role of tissue-resident macrophages in lung injury after trauma or stroke through the inflammatory response. We found that depleting tissue-resident macrophages rather than disrupting the recruitment of monocyte-derived macrophages attenuated lung injury after trauma or stroke. Our findings revealed that the release of circulating alarmins from sites of distant sterile tissue damage triggered an inflammatory response in lung-resident macrophages by binding to receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) on the membrane, which activated epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Mechanistically, ligand-activated RAGE triggered EGFR activation through an interaction, leading to Rab5-mediated RAGE internalization and EGFR phosphorylation, which subsequently recruited and activated P38; this, in turn, promoted RAGE translation and trafficking to the plasma membrane to increase the cellular response to RAGE ligands, consequently exacerbating inflammation. Our study also showed that the loss of RAGE or EGFR expression by adoptive transfer of macrophages, blocking the function of RAGE with a neutralizing antibody, or pharmacological inhibition of EGFR activation in macrophages could protect against trauma- or stroke-induced remote lung injury. Therefore, our study revealed that targeting the RAGE-EGFR signaling pathway in tissue-resident macrophages is a potential therapeutic approach for treating secondary complications of sterile damage.
Keyphrases
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- tyrosine kinase
- small cell lung cancer
- poor prognosis
- inflammatory response
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- oxidative stress
- patient safety
- signaling pathway
- quality improvement
- long non coding rna
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- risk factors
- lymph node
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- endothelial cells
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- zika virus
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- dendritic cells
- diabetic rats
- drug delivery
- trauma patients
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- brain injury
- toll like receptor
- sensitive detection
- cell proliferation
- high glucose
- single molecule
- quantum dots