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Caspase Inhibition Modulates Monocyte-Derived Macrophage Polarization in Damaged Tissues.

Stéphanie SolierMichele MondiniLydia MezianiArnaud JacquelCatherine LacoutTom Vanden BergheYvon JuléJean-Claude MartinouGérard PierronJulie RiviereMarc DelogerCorinne DupuyAnny Slama-SchwokNathalie M DroinPeter VandenabeelePatrick AubergerEric DeutschJamel El BennaPham My-Chan DangEric Solary
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
Circulating monocytes are recruited in damaged tissues to generate macrophages that modulate disease progression. Colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) promotes the generation of monocyte-derived macrophages, which involves caspase activation. Here, we demonstrate that activated caspase-3 and caspase-7 are located to the vicinity of the mitochondria in CSF1-treated human monocytes. Active caspase-7 cleaves p47 PHOX at aspartate 34, which promotes the formation of the NADPH (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate) oxidase complex NOX2 and the production of cytosolic superoxide anions. Monocyte response to CSF-1 is altered in patients with a chronic granulomatous disease, which are constitutively defective in NOX2. Both caspase-7 down-regulation and radical oxygen species scavenging decrease the migration of CSF-1-induced macrophages. Inhibition or deletion of caspases prevents the development of lung fibrosis in mice exposed to bleomycin. Altogether, a non-conventional pathway that involves caspases and activates NOX2 is involved in CSF1-driven monocyte differentiation and could be therapeutically targeted to modulate macrophage polarization in damaged tissues.
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