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* Renal Section, Evans Memorial Department of Clinical Research, Department of Medicine, Boston University Medical Center, Boston, MA 02118;
Section of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637; and
Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Montreal General Hospital Research Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Recent evidence indicates that phagocytic clearance of apoptotic
cells, initially thought to be a silent event, can modulate macrophage
(M
) function. We show in this work that phagocytic uptake of
apoptotic cells or bodies, in the absence of serum or soluble survival
factors, inhibits apoptosis and maintains viability of primary cultures
of murine peritoneal and bone marrow M
with a potency approaching
that of serum-supplemented medium. Apoptotic uptake also profoundly
inhibits the proliferation of bone marrow M
stimulated to
proliferate by M-CSF. While inhibition of proliferation is an unusual
property for survival factors, the combination of increased survival
and decreased proliferation may aid the M
in its role as a scavenger
during resolution of inflammation. The ability of apoptotic cells to
promote survival and inhibit proliferation appears to be the result of
simultaneous activation of Akt and inhibition of the mitogen-activated
protein kinases extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1 and ERK2
(ERK1/2). While several activators of the innate immune system, or
danger signals, also inhibit apoptosis and proliferation, danger
signals and necrotic cells differ from apoptotic cells in that they
activate, rather than inhibit, ERK1/2. These signaling differences may
underlie the opposing tendencies of apoptotic cells and danger signals
in promoting tolerance vs immunity.
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