Patrick H McMinn, Adeel Ahmed, Anna Huttenlocher, David J Beebe, Sheena C Kerr
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In previous work, we have shown that follistatin is secreted at high concentrations by lymphatic endothelial cells during inflammation. Follistatin inhibits activin A, a member of the TGF-β superfamily, and, together, these molecules form a signaling pathway that plays a role in regulating both innate and adaptive immune responses. Although follistatin and activin A are constitutively produced in the pituitary, gonads and skin, their major source in the serum and their effects on neutrophils are poorly understood. Here we report a microfluidic model that includes both blood and lymphatic endothelial vessels, and neutrophils to investigate neutrophil-lymphatic trafficking during infection with P. aeruginosa. We found that lymphatic endothelial cells produce secreted factors that increase neutrophil migration toward P. aeruginosa, and are a significant source of both follistatin and activin A during Pseudomonas infection. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
淋巴系统在感染过程中发挥着积极作用,但淋巴与中性粒细胞的相互作用在宿主防御反应中的作用还不十分清楚。在感染绿脓杆菌、金黄色葡萄球菌和鼠疫耶尔森菌等病原体时,中性粒细胞会从感染部位通过淋巴管道进入引流淋巴结,与常驻淋巴细胞相互作用。人们对这一过程知之甚少,部分原因是缺乏淋巴系统的体外模型。在这里,我们使用三维微尺度淋巴管模型来研究宿主对病原体的防御反应过程中中性粒细胞与淋巴细胞的相互作用。在以前的工作中,我们已经证明淋巴内皮细胞在炎症期间会分泌高浓度的绒毛膜促性腺激素。Follistatin 可抑制 TGF-β 超家族成员激活素 A,这些分子共同形成了一条信号通路,在调节先天性和适应性免疫反应中发挥作用。虽然脑垂体、性腺和皮肤会组成性地产生follistatin和activin A,但人们对它们在血清中的主要来源及其对中性粒细胞的影响知之甚少。在此,我们报告了一个包括血液和淋巴内皮细胞以及中性粒细胞的微流体模型,以研究铜绿假单胞菌感染期间中性粒细胞-淋巴细胞的迁移。我们发现,淋巴内皮细胞产生的分泌因子可增加中性粒细胞向铜绿假单胞菌的迁移,并且是铜绿假单胞菌感染期间follistatin和activin A的重要来源。我们发现,淋巴内皮细胞分泌的绒毛素能抑制活化素 A,从而增加中性粒细胞的迁移。这些数据表明,在感染过程中,嗜中性粒细胞迁移会受到绒毛素与活化素 A 比例的影响,比例越高,嗜中性粒细胞迁移越快。
The lymphatic endothelium-derived follistatin: activin A axis regulates neutrophil motility in response to Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
The lymphatic system plays an active role during infection, however the role of lymphatic-neutrophil interactions in host-defense responses is not well understood. During infection with pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus and Yersinia pestis, neutrophils traffic from sites of infection through the lymphatic vasculature, to draining lymph nodes to interact with resident lymphocytes. This process is poorly understood, in part, due to the lack of in vitro models of the lymphatic system. Here we use a 3D microscale lymphatic vessel model to examine neutrophil-lymphatic cell interactions during host defense responses to pathogens. In previous work, we have shown that follistatin is secreted at high concentrations by lymphatic endothelial cells during inflammation. Follistatin inhibits activin A, a member of the TGF-β superfamily, and, together, these molecules form a signaling pathway that plays a role in regulating both innate and adaptive immune responses. Although follistatin and activin A are constitutively produced in the pituitary, gonads and skin, their major source in the serum and their effects on neutrophils are poorly understood. Here we report a microfluidic model that includes both blood and lymphatic endothelial vessels, and neutrophils to investigate neutrophil-lymphatic trafficking during infection with P. aeruginosa. We found that lymphatic endothelial cells produce secreted factors that increase neutrophil migration toward P. aeruginosa, and are a significant source of both follistatin and activin A during Pseudomonas infection. We determined that follistatin produced by lymphatic endothelial cells inhibits activin A, resulting in increased neutrophil migration. These data suggest that the follistatin:activin A ratio influences neutrophil trafficking during infection with higher ratios increasing neutrophil migration.
期刊介绍:
Integrative Biology publishes original biological research based on innovative experimental and theoretical methodologies that answer biological questions. The journal is multi- and inter-disciplinary, calling upon expertise and technologies from the physical sciences, engineering, computation, imaging, and mathematics to address critical questions in biological systems.
Research using experimental or computational quantitative technologies to characterise biological systems at the molecular, cellular, tissue and population levels is welcomed. Of particular interest are submissions contributing to quantitative understanding of how component properties at one level in the dimensional scale (nano to micro) determine system behaviour at a higher level of complexity.
Studies of synthetic systems, whether used to elucidate fundamental principles of biological function or as the basis for novel applications are also of interest.