Modulation of Airway Epithelial Innate Immunity and Wound Repair by M(GM-CSF) and M(M-CSF) Macrophages.
van Riet. Sander S; van Schadewijk. Annemarie A; de Vos. Steve S; Vandeghinste. Nick N; Rottier. Robbert J RJ; Stolk. Jan J; Hiemstra. Pieter S PS; Khedoe. Padmini P
Key Findings
- M(GM‑CSF) macrophages increase epithelial immune gene expression (DEFB4A, CXCL8, IL6)
- Both M(GM‑CSF) and M(M‑CSF) macrophages accelerate wound repair of airway cells, even after cigarette smoke exposure
- Co‑culture triggers higher CAMP (LL‑37) production in M(GM‑CSF) macrophages, not in M(M‑CSF)
Practical Outcomes
- The main takeaway is that boosting GM‑CSF‑driven macrophage activity could raise LL‑37 levels and improve airway healing, but this is based on in‑vitro data only. No specific dosage or supplement protocol is provided, so enthusiasts should view it as a mechanistic insight that may guide future research rather than an immediate actionable strategy.
Summary
In lab experiments, a type of immune cell called M(GM‑CSF) macrophages helped airway cells boost their defenses and heal faster, even when exposed to cigarette smoke. These macrophages also produced more of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, which is known to aid repair. The findings suggest that activating this macrophage pathway might support lung health, but the work is still early and done only in cell cultures.
Abstract
Airway epithelial cells and macrophages participate in inflammatory responses to external noxious stimuli, which can cause epithelial injury. Upon injury, epithelial cells and macrophages act in concert to ensure rapid restoration of epithelial integrity. The nature of the interactions between these cell types during epithelial repair is incompletely understood. We used an in vitro human coculture model of primary bronchial epithelial cells cultured at the air-liquid interface (ALI-PBEC) and polarized primary monocyte-derived macrophages. Using this coculture, we studied the contribution of macrophages to epithelial innate immunity, wound healing capacity, and epithelial exposure to whole cigarette smoke (WCS). Coculture of ALI-PBEC with lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated M(GM-CSF) macrophages increased the expression of DEFB4A, CXCL8, and IL6 at 24 h in the ALI-PBEC, whereas LPS-activated M(M-CSF) macrophages only increased epithelial IL6 expression. Furthermore, wound repair was accelerated by coculture with both activated M(GM-CSF) and M(M-CSF) macrophages, also following WCS exposure. Coculture of ALI-PBEC and M(GM-CSF) macrophages resulted in increased CAMP expression in M(GM-CSF) macrophages, which was absent in M(M-CSF) macrophages. CAMP encodes LL-37, an antimicrobial peptide with immune-modulating and repair-enhancing activities. In conclusion, dynamic crosstalk between ALI-PBEC and macrophages enhances epithelial innate immunity and wound repair, even upon concomitant cigarette smoke exposure.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-04-14T00:00:00.000Z
10.1159/000506833
17
51