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* Department of Medicine and
Department of Immunology, and
Department of Duke Human Vaccine Institute, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710
| Abstract |
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and NOS2 and stimulate the proliferation of memory T cells. Relative to WT mice, influenza-infected CCR2-deficient mice display marked reductions in the accumulation of monocyte-derived inflammatory cells, cells producing NOS2, the expression of costimulatory molecules, markers of lung injury, weight loss, and mortality. We conclude that CCR2+ monocyte-derived cells are the predominant cause of immune pathology during influenza infection and that such pathology is markedly abrogated in the absence of CCR2. | Introduction |
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The immune pathology of influenza infection has been associated with several specific cytokines. Mice deficient in NO synthase 2 (NOS2)5 or TNF-
display decreased mortality when infected with mouse-adapted influenza (11, 12, 13). This increased survival appears to occur because NOS2 and TNF-
induce significant lung damage, but contribute little to anti-influenza immune responses (14, 15). The source of pathogenic cytokines during influenza infection has not been determined, but development of pulmonary immune pathology during sepsis has been associated with NOS2 production by a bone marrow-derived cell type, and is reduced by macrophage depletion (16, 17). Neutrophils and, to a lesser extent, macrophages have been suggested to cause lung damage during most cases of acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome (18). In the case of influenza, myeloid infiltrates predominate, and macrophages infected in vitro are a major source of inflammatory cytokines (19, 20, 21). The accumulation of monocytes/macrophages in lungs during influenza infection has been associated with the development of lung injury. Influenza-infected CCR2-deficient mice display decreased monocyte/macrophage accumulation, decreased lung damage, and a trend toward decreased mortality, whereas mice lacking CCR5 display increased pulmonary infiltrates and increased lung damage (20). CCR2-deficient mice also display a reduced accumulation of monocytes/macrophages in lungs and reduced lung injury in other inflammatory lung diseases (22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27), suggesting that one or more CCR2+ cell types can induce pulmonary immune pathology. However, the specific cell types and cell migration events responsible for influenza-induced immune pathology and mortality have not been identified.
Until recently, all macrophages were thought to develop from the progressive maturation of cells along a single lineage of mononuclear phagocytes (28). It is now recognized that at least two distinct populations of monocytes are present in the circulation (29, 30). Constitutive monocytes, which in mice are CD11b+ Gr-1– CCR2– CX3CR1high cells, enter tissues constitutively via the activity of the chemokine receptor CX3CR1 (30). Inflammatory monocytes are CD11b+ Gr-1high CCR2+ CX3CR1int cells that enter inflamed peripheral and lymphoid tissues via the activity of CCR2 (30, 31). A small population of Gr-1int CCR2+ monocytes has also been described (32). Differentiation of monocytes into dendritic cells (DC) in vivo has been well documented (30, 33, 34, 35). However, the extent to which monocytes serve as DC precursors under most pathologic conditions remains unclear (36, 37).
In this study, we identify, phenotype, and characterize cell types that accumulate in lungs in response to CCR2 stimulation in mice that constitutively overexpress CCL2 in the lungs (38). We then examine the cell types we identified during influenza infection of wild-type (WT) mice. We find that the majority of inflammatory cells in influenza-infected lungs arise from CCR2+ monocytes and include monocyte-derived DC (moDC), exudate macrophages (exMACs), and a transitional cell type. Together, these CCR2+ monocyte-derived cells provide the bulk of cytokine production in influenza-infected lungs and are the major cell types responsible for influenza-induced immune pathology, morbidity, and mortality.
| Materials and Methods |
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BALB/c, C57BL/6, and CCR2–/– mice were purchased from Charles River Laboratories or The Jackson Laboratory. Surfactant protein C (SPC)-MCP transgenic mice (38) were backcrossed eight generations onto the BALB/c background. CX3CR1GFP/GFP mice were provided by D. Littman (New York University, New York, NY) and crossed with WT mice to produce CX3CR1+/GFP mice. DO11.10 mice (OVA-specific TCR) and hemagglutinin (HA)-TCR mice (influenza HA-specific TCR) were purchased from The Jackson Laboratory. All mice used for experiments were between 8 and 13 wk old. For flow analysis of flu-infected lung cells, mice were anesthetized by ketamine (100 mg/kg)/xylazine (10 mg/kg) i.p. and then infected with H1N1 influenza virus strain A/Puerto Rico/8/34 (PR8) (provided by Y.-W. He, Duke University, Durham, NC) intranasally (30 µl of 8.9 x 105 tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50)/ml virus per mouse). Body weight of infected mice was monitored daily. For mortality, pathology, and viral titer studies, mice were infected with the same virus strain (high dose, 30 µl of 5 x 106 TCID50/ml; low dose, 30 µl of 8.5 x 104 TCID50/ml), but from a different source (American Type Culture Collection VR-95). All animal experiments were conducted in accordance with National Institutes of Health guidelines and protocols approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee at Duke University.
Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and lung parenchyma cell isolation
BAL cells were collected, as described previously (19). Briefly, tracheas of euthanized mice were cannulated with an 18-gauge angiocath connected to a 1-ml syringe and the lungs were flushed with 0.6
0.8 ml of PBS five times. BAL cells were washed once with PBS. To obtain lung parenchymal cells, lungs were perfused with 3 ml of HBSS-collagenase (1 mg/ml), incubated at 37°C for 30 min, minced, dissociated through a 70-µm mesh strainer, and centrifuged at 450 x g at room temperature for 20 min over a 17% metrizamide (Accurate Chemical & Scientific) cushion. Low-density cells were collected, washed in PBS, and subjected to Ab staining.
Flow cytometric analysis
Abs used included anti-NOS2 FITC, anti-I-A/I-E FITC, anti-CD11c PE, and anti-Gr-1 allophycocyanin (all BD Pharmingen); and anti-CD11b allophycocyanin/Cy7, anti-CD11c PECy5.5, anti-CD80 PE, anti-CD86 PE, anti-CD40 PE, anti-ICOS ligand (IcosL) biotin, and streptavidin PE (eBioscience). The anti-CCR2 Ab MC-21 was provided by M. Mack (Klinikum University, Regensburg, Germany). Cells were stained in HBSS containing 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM HEPES, 5% FBS, 5% normal mouse serum, 5% normal rat serum, and 1% Fc block (eBioscience) at 4°C for 30 min; washed three times; and then analyzed using a BD LSRII flow cytometer. For cell sorting, cells were collected and stained as above, and sorted into two to four populations using a BD FACSVantage cell sorter. For morphologic analysis, FACS-purified cell populations from SPC-MCP lungs were cytospun onto microscope slides at 600 rpm for 5 min, stained with Giemsa, and photographed under light microscopy.
T cell proliferation assays
Serial dilutions of FACS-purified AM, DC, and exMACs obtained from SPC-MCP lungs were cultured with 105 CD4+ T cells with or without OVA peptide in 96-well plates for 3 days. Allogeneic CD4+ T cells were purified from the spleens and lymph nodes (LN) of C57BL/6 mice using a Lympholyte M gradient, followed by negative selection on a MACS column using biotinylated anti-CD8, anti-CD11b, anti-CD11c, anti-B220, anti-CD16/32, anti-CD19, anti-CD49b, anti-Gr-1, and anti-TER119 Abs (BD Pharmingen), and streptavidin magnetic beads (Miltenyi Biotec). Naive and total OVA-specific CD4+ T cells were derived from the spleens and LN of DO.11.10 mice using the same method, except that naive CD4+ T cells were further purified using a 50–70% Percoll after negative selection. After 3 days of culture, T cell proliferation was measured by BrdU Kit (Roche Applied Science). For CD8 T cell proliferation, 104 FACS-purified AM, DC, exMACs, and double-intermediate (DI) cells obtained from flu-infected lungs were cultured with 105 CD8+ T cells in 96-well plates for 3 days. CD8 T cells were purified as CD4 T cells, except that anti-CD4 was used instead of anti-CD8 in the negative selection. CD8 T cells were labeled with CFSE (Invitrogen Life Technologies) before being cultured with APCs. Because APCs are not present as distinct populations in infected mice, cells were gated to favor the purity of populations with lower APC activity. Purity of APCs based on strict postsort analysis is as follows: AM, 97%; DI, 85%; DC, 65% (contaminated with DI cells); and exMACs, 68% (contaminated with AM). After 3 days, cells in each well were analyzed by flow cytometry, and CFSE dilution was recorded for CD8+ T cells.
Cytokine expression
FACS-purifed AMs, DCs, and exMACs from SPC-MCP lungs were cultured in 96-well plates in RPMI 1640 with or without LPS for 2 days. Supernatants were assayed for TNF-
concentration using a colorimetric sandwich ELISA kit (R&D Systems). The lowest concentration of standard curve is 15.6 pg/ml. For NOS2 intracellular staining, naive WT and influenza-infected WT and CCR2–/– mice were sacrificed on day 5. BAL and lung parenchyma cells were collected, as above; stained with anti-CD11c, CD11b, I-A/I-E, and Gr-1; and then fixed and permeabilized using BD Cytofix/Cytoperm solution. Cells were then stained with either anti-NOS2 FITC or IgG FITC and analyzed by flow cytometry.
Total BAL protein and lactose dehydrogenase (LDH) activity
Influenza-infected mice were sacrificed on day 6. BAL fluid (3 ml) was obtained, as described above, and separated from BAL cells by centrifugation. The total protein concentration was measured using the Bradford assay reagent (Pierce), according to manufacturers instruction. LDH activity in BAL fluid was measured using an LDH-based toxicology assay kit (Sigma-Aldrich).
Virus titer measurements
Mice were infected with influenza and sacrificed on day 5. BAL fluid was obtained, as described above. Lung tissues were minced in the same BAL fluid (2 ml), dissociated using a nylon mesh, and centrifuged to remove cells, and the supernatant was collected. Influenza virus titer in lungs and serum was quantified by using standard plaque assay on Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells or by determining the TCID50 (39). For plaque assays, lung or serum samples were serially diluted in PBS containing Ca2+ and Mg2+ and 0.1% BSA. Diluted samples were plated on confluent monolayers of MDCK cells and allowed to adsorb for 1 h at 37°C in a tissue culture incubator. After 1 h, inocula were removed and cells were overlayed with 1x MEM containing agar and L-1-tosylamido-2-phenylethyl chloromethyl ketone-treated trypsin (Sigma-Aldrich) at a final concentration of 0.1 µg/ml. Plates were incubated 2 days in a tissue culture incubator (37°C, 5% CO2) to allow plaques to form. When plaques were clearly visible, agar was removed and the plates were stained with 1% crystal violet in methanol to aid in counting, and then PFU for each sample was determined. To determine TCID50, 10x serial dilutions of 0.2-ml aliquots of lung samples were added in triplicate in 96-well plates. A total of 2.5 x 104 MDCK cells was added to each well, and the plates were incubated at 37°C for 5 days. Infected wells were identified by chicken RBC hemagglutination, and TCID50 was calculated as described (39).
Statistics
All numerical data are presented as mean ± SD. The comparison between survival curves is performed by log rank test in Prism software. The test is equivalent to the Mantel-Haenszel test. All the other data are analyzed by ANOVA or unpaired Students t tests using Prism software, as indicated in the figure legends.
| Results |
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Because the unambiguous identification of pulmonary inflammatory cells during active infection is often difficult, we began these studies by examining the cell types that accumulate in the lung in response to CCL2 overexpression. CCL2 is expressed in the lungs at high levels during influenza infection and has been implicated in the accumulation of monocytes/macrophages in this disease (20, 40, 41). To mimic the robust expression of CCL2 that occurs during influenza infection without the accompanying cell activation and cytopathology, we used SPC-MCP mice, which express high levels of CCL2 under the control of the SPC promoter (38). We and others have shown that large numbers of monocytes and macrophages accumulate in the lungs of SPC-MCP mice, but a detailed phenotypic analysis of the cells recovered has not been performed (38, 42). We now find that the BAL and lungs of SPC-MCP mice contain four distinct cell types in the monocyte-macrophage-DC family. For clarity, we will identify each of these cell types based on the results of these studies, although the identity of some populations was not known at the time these studies were performed.
The first cell type identified in SPC-MCP lungs is alveolar macrophages (AM). Consistent with previous reports (43), AM are autofluorescent CD11c+CD11b– MHCIIlow cells that constitute >90% of BAL cells in WT mice (Fig. 1A, gate R3). AM are clearly seen in digests of WT lungs (Fig. 1C, gate R3) and are increased in number in both the BAL and lungs of SPC-MCP mice (Fig. 1, B and D, gate R3, and G). On cytospins, AM appear as large round cells with abundant vacuolated cytoplasm (Fig. 1F).
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The third cell type identified in SPC-MCP lungs is inflammatory monocytes. The majority of these CD11c– MHCII– CD11b+ monocytes express high levels of Gr-1 (Fig. 1, B and D, gates R2 and R4), whereas the remainder are Gr-1int (Fig. 1, B and D, gate R5). Gr-1high monocytes overlap in the expression of several markers with neutrophils (Fig. 1, A–D, gate R4), but can be distinguished from the latter based on Gr-1 expression levels and side scatter (Fig. 1E) or by expression of CX3CR1 (see below). Monocytes are present at very low levels in the BAL and lungs of WT mice (Fig. 1G). Lung monocytes display the morphology of monocytes in blood (Fig. 1F).
Unlike the above cells, the fourth cell type we find in SPC-MCP lungs has not been clearly identified in previous flow cytometric studies. In both the BAL and lungs of SPC-MCP mice, there appear cells that colocalize with AM in CD11c and MHCII profiles, but are CD11b+ and display less side scatter than AM (Fig. 1, B and D, gates R3 and R7). These cells proved to be exMACs. On cytospins, exMACs are almost as large as AM, have abundant cytoplasm, and typically have bilobed or kidney-shaped nuclei (Fig. 1F).
Molecule expression patterns and activities of inflammatory cells in SPC-MCP mice
To further characterize lung cell types in SPC-MCP mice, we examined expression of costimulatory molecules and the chemokine receptors CX3CR1 and CCR2. As expected, lung monocytes express high levels of CX3CR1 and CCR2, and can thus be easily distinguished from neutrophils, which express neither molecule (Fig. 2A). Lung DC are CX3CR1+, predominately CCR2+ (Fig. 2A), and express high levels of CD80 and CD86 and low levels of CD40 (Fig. 2B). Of interest, DC recovered from the lungs of SPC-MCP mice differ somewhat from DC obtained from WT lungs. Those from SPC-MCP mice display decreased side scatter, decreased forward scatter, decreased expression of DEC205, and increased expression of CD11b (Fig. 2C), suggesting that DC in SPC-MCP mice may represent a recruited cell population that differs from resident pulmonary DC. AM express low levels of CD80, but do not express CX3CR1, CCR2, CD86, or CD40 (Fig. 2, A and B). In contrast, exMACs express CCR2, are uniformly CX3CR1+ (Fig. 2A), and express high levels of CD80 and CD86, but little CD40 (Fig. 2B), and thus appear more similar to DC than to AM. All lung APC types express high levels of IcosL.
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by inflammatory cell populations. When cultured, AM purified from SPC-MCP mice produce only background levels of TNF-
, whereas DC produce TNF-
at low levels (Fig. 3D). In contrast, exMACs produce significant amounts of TNF-
, which can be further increased by stimulation with LPS. Based on the above assays and previous reports, we identified the major cell types that accumulate in the lungs of SPC-MCP mice as inflammatory monocytes, DC, AM, and exMACs.
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Once we had identified and phenotyped the inflammatory cell types that accumulate in lungs in response to CCL2 overexpression, we sought to determine whether these same cell types also appear in WT mice during infection. We therefore examined lung cell populations in WT BALB/c mice infected with influenza. In initial studies, cell populations appeared in infected WT mice that were similar to those seen in uninfected SPC-MCP mice; however, the very high frequency of CD11b+ Gr-1+ cells found in infected WT mice made it difficult to discriminate neutrophils from other cell types (data not shown). We then examined inflammatory cells in the lungs of influenza-infected CX3CR1GFP/+ mice, a model that allows the clear discrimination of GFP– neutrophils from other CD11b+ Gr-1+ cell types (Fig. 4, GFP gating not shown). Because CX3CR1GFP/+ mice are on the C57BL/6 background, we compared inflammatory cell populations in BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice on day 5 of infection and found no significant differences between strains (data now shown). Influenza infection of CX3CR1GFP/+ mice results in a marked increase in the number of Gr-1high monocytes in the lungs (Fig. 4, A and B). Lung Gr-1high monocyte numbers peak at day 5 and return to baseline by day 15 (Fig. 4F). Influenza infection also results in both a relative and absolute decrease in lung AM frequency (Fig. 4, A, C, and F). AM numbers reach a nadir at day 10, but recover by day 15 (Fig. 4F). Infected mice also display an increase in the number of lung exMACs. Of note, exMACs are almost uniformly Gr-1+ at day 5, but are Gr-1– at day 10 (Fig. 4C), suggesting that these cells have recently differentiated from Gr-1+ monocytes. ExMAC numbers peak at day 10 of infection (Fig. 4F). Unexpectedly, the inflammatory cell type that accumulates to the greatest extent during influenza infection is DC (Fig. 4, A, D, and F). As with exMACs, almost all lung DC are Gr-1+ at day 5 after infection, but Gr-1– at day 10 (Fig. 4D), suggesting that these cells arise from Gr-1+ monocytes and thus represent moDC. Intranasal instillation of PBS alone stimulates no significant changes in lung cell populations on day 5 (data not shown).
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To determine the inflammatory cell populations that express NOS2, an enzyme known to cause lung injury and mortality during influenza infection (12, 15, 44, 45), we examined NOS2 expression by intracellular staining. Both exMACs and DC recovered from lungs on day 5 of infection express NOS2, whereas AM do not (Fig. 5C). DI cells display a bimodal distribution of NOS2 expression (Fig. 5C).
Direct identification of monocyte-derived cell types
The above findings are consistent with a model in which Gr-1+ inflammatory monocytes enter lungs in response to influenza infection, up-regulate CD11c and MHCII expression to become DI cells, then mature into either exMACs or moDC. To confirm that DI cells, exMACs, and DC arise from monocytes within the lung, we adoptively transferred Gr-1high or Gr-1int monocytes (obtained from the lungs of SPC-MCP mice) via the trachea into the lungs of WT mice and examined the development of these cells in the presence or absence of influenza infection. The phenotype of donor-derived cells in BAL was examined 48 h after transfer and 24 h after infection. Donor cells were uniformly CD11c– and MHCII– before transfer (data not shown). In the absence of influenza infection, both Gr-1high and Gr-1int monocytes mature into DI cells and, to a lesser extent, exMACS, but not DC (Fig. 6B). In influenza-infected recipients of Gr-1int monocytes, a large proportion of both exMACs and DI cells is donor derived, but few DC are of donor origin (Fig. 6, A and C). In contrast, donor-derived cells constitute a large proportion of DC, exMACs, and DI cells in infected recipients of Gr-1high monocytes (Fig. 6C). Thus, during influenza infection, DI cells, exMACs, and DC can be derived from inflammatory monocytes in the lungs. Influenza infection appears to increase the differentiation of monocytes into moDC (Fig. 6D), although this trend does not reach statistical significance (p = 0.14).
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The above findings strongly suggest that the vast majority of inflammatory cells present in the lungs by day 5 of influenza infection are derived from CCR2+ inflammatory monocytes, and therefore, that the accumulation of these cells is likely to be CCR2 dependent. To test this, we examined lung cell populations in CCR2–/– mice 5 days after influenza infection. We find that CCR2–/– mice display a marked decrease in the accumulation of DC, exMACs, DI cells, and Gr-1+ monocytes during influenza infection (Fig. 7, A–C and G). Moreover, the populations that are the most reduced in CCR2–/– mice are the CD11bhigh Gr-1+ subsets of DC and exMACS (Fig. 7, B and C), and DI cells (Fig. 7G). These are also the cell types that express the highest levels of CD86 and CD40, resulting in a marked decrease in cells expressing these costimulatory molecules in infected CCR2–/– mice (Fig. 7, D, E, and H). The frequency of cells expressing NOS2 is also dramatically decreased in CCR2–/– mice (Fig. 7, F and H). Overall, the accumulation of DC, exMACs, and DI cells during influenza infection is reduced by
80% in CCR2–/– mice (Fig. 7G).
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The finding that CCR2-deficient mice display marked reductions in inflammatory cell numbers and the frequency of cells expressing immune stimulatory molecules and NOS2 suggested that these mice would be protected from influenza-induced immune pathology. We therefore compared markers of influenza-induced lung injury and morbidity between CCR2–/– and WT mice. On day 6 after high dose of virus inoculation, total protein concentration and LDH activity in BAL fluid are both significantly decreased in CCR2–/– relative to WT mice (Fig. 8, A and B). CCR2–/– mice also display a significant decrease in weight loss after influenza infection (Fig. 8C). This decrease in weight loss is highly reproducible. In studies examining other endpoints, WT mice average 19.2% weight loss on day 6 of influenza infection vs 8.3% for CCR2–/– mice (n = 14, p = 0.0004 by Mann-Whitney U test). Most strikingly, CCR2–/– mice display an 89% decrease in influenza-induced mortality after high-dose influenza infection (Fig. 8D). Importantly, this decrease in morbidity and mortality was not associated with an increase in viral titers or dissemination. Five days after a high-dose infection, influenza titers in lungs are slightly, but not significantly, lower in CCR2–/– than in WT mice (Fig. 8E), and virus is not detected in the blood of either group (data not shown). To examine viral titers at later time points, we performed low-dose infections. Eight days after low-dose infection, titers are again slightly lower in the lungs of CCR2–/– mice (Fig. 8F) and are undetectable in both groups on day 10. These results strongly suggest that the CCR2-dependent migration of monocytes and the development of monocyte-derived inflammatory cells in the lung are largely responsible for the lung injury and subsequent morbidity and mortality that occur during influenza infection.
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| Discussion |
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- and NOS2-producing cells, and with two indices of lung injury, strongly suggesting a causal relationship between monocyte infiltration, pulmonary immune pathology, and mortality. At the same time, influenza infection results in a decrease in AM numbers with little or no increase in costimulatory molecule expression, Ag-presenting activity, or NOS2 expression by AM, suggesting that the activation of these cells does not make a significant contribution to influenza-induced immune pathology. We cannot rule out the possibility that neutrophils play some role in this process, especially early in the course of infection. However, we find relatively little neutrophil accumulation at the times we examine, and the accumulation that we do observe is not affected by CCR2 deficiency (data not shown). In addition, conditional Mcl-1 knockout mice, in which circulating neutrophil numbers are reduced by
80% (46), display no changes in weight loss or mortality after influenza infection, despite a 70% reduction in lung neutrophil accumulation (K. Lin, unpublished data). Influenza infection of CCR2–/– mice has previously been shown to result in decreased histological indices of pulmonary inflammation and pathology, a decreased number of monocytes/macrophages in BAL, and a trend toward decreased mortality (19, 20). In this study, we find a much greater effect of CCR2 deficiency on inflammation and mortality. This is most likely due to our use of higher influenza doses, resulting in greater mortality in WT mice, and our use of flow cytometric analyses of lung cells. Our results are most similar to those obtained in NOS2-deficient mice, which display a striking reduction in pneumonitis and mortality after influenza infection (12). This suggests that NOS2 production may be the predominant mechanism by which monocyte-derived cells induce immune pathology and, consistent with Fig. 7, that monocyte-derived cells are the major source of iNOS during influenza infection.
The magnitude of mortality reduction seen in CCR2–/– mice is surprising, given that CCR2 is required for the control of many pulmonary infections (19, 47, 48, 49). However, unlike most other pathogens, influenza virus appears to be resistant to host responses such as NOS2 production, and such responses may only inhibit effective adaptive immune responses (12, 50). Consistent with this, we find that influenza-infected CCR2–/– mice display little or no increase in lung viral titers relative to WT mice and no evidence of viral dissemination. In two previous studies, CCR2 deficiency was found to have no effect on (19) or to increase (20) lung influenza titers. However, in the latter study, titers in BAL rather that lung homogenates were examined. NOS2-deficient mice also display reduced lung viral titers during influenza infection (12).
Our examination of monocyte-derived inflammatory cell types in CCL2 transgenic and influenza-infected WT mice provides a mechanism for the reduced immune pathology seen in CCR2–/– mice. As expected, the major circulating cell type recruited to the lungs in both these models is inflammatory monocytes, which include both Gr-1high and, to a lesser extent, Gr-1int cells (Figs. 1 and 4). This finding is similar to previous results obtained in inflamed skin, peritoneum, and lung, because both Gr-1high and Gr-1int monocytes express CCR2 and have been shown to accumulate at sites of CCL2 expression or administration (30, 32, 51, 52). Upon entering the lung, inflammatory monocytes mature to form what appears to be a transitional cell type (DI cells), increasing their expression of CD11c, MHCII, CD40, and CD86, while continuing to express high levels of Ly-6C. A portion of these cells also expresses NOS2. DI cells appear to continue their differentiation to become either moDC or exMACs. Unexpectedly, differentiation to moDC predominates during influenza infection, because these cells are the largest inflammatory cell population found in influenza-infected lungs. The designation of moDC is based on their high expression of CD11c and MHCII, their transient expression of Ly-6C, their morphology, their capacity to stimulate robust proliferation of naive T cells, and their derivation from adoptively transferred Gr-1high monocytes. MoDC are capable of stimulating influenza-specific T cells, but it is presently unclear whether this contributes to anti-influenza immune response.
The second major mature inflammatory monocyte-derived cell population we find in both SPC-MCP and influenza-infected lungs is exMACs. Our designation of these cells is based on their macrophage-like morphology, their capacity to stimulate memory but not naive T cell proliferation, and their derivation directly from monocytes (Figs. 1E, 3, and 6). ExMACs display several phenotypic characteristics of DC, including robust expression of CD11c, CX3CR1, CD80, CD86, and CD40 (Fig. 2). However, they would not be classified as a DC subtype because they do not appear to stimulate the proliferation of naive T cells, and they stimulate little, if any, HA-specific T cell proliferation. ExMACs are a major source of inflammatory cytokines, producing high levels of TNF-
and NOS2 (Figs. 3 and 5).
The finding that monocyte-derived cells are the predominant cause of immune pathology during influenza infection raises the possibility that these cells make a significant contribution to other types of acute lung injury. Cells similar to moDC and/or exMACs have been described in several types of pulmonary inflammation, including bleomycin treatment (53), overexpression of GM-CSF (54), and intratracheal instillation of heat-killed Listeria monocytogenes (55). It is thus conceivable that inhibition of CCR2 would provide a means to reduce lung injury in several types of pulmonary inflammation. This possibility may be limited to noninfectious causes of lung injury or to infections such as influenza, in which monocyte-derived cells do not significantly contribute to the control of infection. Whether CCR2 inhibition will have the same effect as CCR2 deficiency or would lead to other adverse effects, such as an increase in secondary bacterial infections, remains to be determined.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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1 This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants P30ES011961, U54AI057157, and U01AI 074529. ![]()
2 Current address: Chuo-Samaria Hospital, 1-5-4 Tsukishima Chuo-ku, Tokyo 104-0052 Japan. ![]()
3 Current address: Laboratory of Respiratory Biology, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709. ![]()
4 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Michael Dee Gunn, Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Box 3547, Durham, NC 27710. E-mail address: michael.gunn{at}duke.edu ![]()
5 Abbreviations used in this paper: NOS2, inducible NO synthase; AM, alveolar macrophage; BAL, bronchoalveolar lavage; DC, dendritic cell; DI, double intermediate; exMAC, exudate macrophage; HA, hemagglutinin; IcosL, ICOS ligand; int, intermediate; LDH, lactose dehydrogenase; LN, lymph node; MDCK, Madin-Darby canine kidney; moDC, monocyte-derived DC; SPC, surfactant protein C; TCID, tissue culture infectious dose; WT, wild type. ![]()
Received for publication June 25, 2007. Accepted for publication November 29, 2007.
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J. G. Ledford, H. Goto, E. N. Potts, S. Degan, H. W. Chu, D. R. Voelker, M. E. Sunday, G. J. Cianciolo, W. M. Foster, M. Kraft, et al. SP-A Preserves Airway Homeostasis During Mycoplasma pneumoniae Infection in Mice J. Immunol., June 15, 2009; 182(12): 7818 - 7827. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. R. Aldridge Jr., C. E. Moseley, D. A. Boltz, N. J. Negovetich, C. Reynolds, J. Franks, S. A. Brown, P. C. Doherty, R. G. Webster, and P. G. Thomas From the Cover: TNF/iNOS-producing dendritic cells are the necessary evil of lethal influenza virus infection PNAS, March 31, 2009; 106(13): 5306 - 5311. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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E. G. Pamer Tipping the balance in favor of protective immunity during influenza virus infection PNAS, March 31, 2009; 106(13): 4961 - 4962. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Herold, M. Steinmueller, W. von Wulffen, L. Cakarova, R. Pinto, S. Pleschka, M. Mack, W. A. Kuziel, N. Corazza, T. Brunner, et al. Lung epithelial apoptosis in influenza virus pneumonia: the role of macrophage-expressed TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand J. Exp. Med., December 22, 2008; 205(13): 3065 - 3077. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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