Innate Immune Training Initiates Efferocytosis to Protect against Lung Injury.
Yoon-Young KangDong-Young KimSang-Yong LeeHee-Joong KimTaehawn KimJeong A ChoTaewon LeeEun Young ChoiPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Innate immune training involves myelopoiesis, dynamic gene modulation, and functional reprogramming of myeloid cells in response to secondary heterologous challenges. The present study evaluates whether systemic innate immune training can protect tissues from local injury. Systemic pretreatment of mice with β-glucan, a trained immunity agonist, reduces the mortality rate of mice with bleomycin-induced lung injury and fibrosis, as well as decreasing collagen deposition in the lungs. β-Glucan pretreatment induces neutrophil accumulation in the lungs and enhances efferocytosis. Training of mice with β-glucan results in histone modification in both alveolar macrophages (AMs) and neighboring lung epithelial cells. Training also increases the production of RvD1 and soluble mediators by AMs and efferocytes. Efferocytosis increases trained immunity in AMs by stimulating RvD1 release, thus inducing SIRT1 expression in neighboring lung epithelial cells. Elevated epithelial SIRT1 expression is associated with decreased epithelial cell apoptosis after lung injury, attenuating tissue damage. Further, neutrophil depletion dampens the effects of β-glucan on macrophage accumulation, epigenetic modification in lung macrophages, epithelial SIRT1 expression, and injury-mediated fibrosis in the lung. These findings provide mechanistic insights into innate immune training and clues to the potential ability of centrally trained immunity to protect peripheral organs against injury-mediated disorders.
Keyphrases
- innate immune
- virtual reality
- poor prognosis
- oxidative stress
- dna methylation
- high fat diet induced
- gene expression
- acute myeloid leukemia
- resistance training
- bone marrow
- adipose tissue
- risk factors
- dendritic cells
- type diabetes
- body composition
- metabolic syndrome
- endothelial cells
- wild type
- climate change
- high intensity
- high glucose
- drug induced