4.8 Article

The Fractalkine Receptor CX3CR1 Protects Against Liver Fibrosis by Controlling Differentiation and Survival of Infiltrating Hepatic Monocytes

Journal

HEPATOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 5, Pages 1769-1782

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/hep.23894

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Chemokines modulate inflammatory responses that are prerequisites for organ fibrosis upon liver injury. Monocyte-derived hepatic macrophages are critical for the development, maintenance, and resolution of hepatic fibrosis. The specific role of monocyte-associated chemokine (C-X3-C motif) receptor 1 (CX(3)CR1) and its cognate ligand fractalkine [chemokine (C-X3-C motif) ligand 1)] in liver inflammation and fibrosis is currently unknown. We examined 169 patients with chronic liver diseases and 84 healthy controls; we found that CX(3)CL1 is significantly up-regulated in the circulation upon disease progression, whereas CX(3)CR1 is down-regulated intrahepatically in patients with advanced liver fibrosis or cirrhosis. To analyze the functional relevance of this pathway, two models of experimental liver fibrosis were applied to wild-type (WT) and CX(3)CR1-deficient mice. Fractalkine expression was induced upon liver injury in mice, primarily in hepatocytes and hepatic stellate cells. CX(3)CR1(-/-) animals developed greater hepatic fibrosis than WT animals with carbon tetrachloride induced and bile duct ligation induced fibrosis. CX(3)CR1(-/-) mice displayed significantly increased numbers of monocyte-derived macrophages within the injured liver. Chimeric animals that underwent bone marrow transplantation revealed that CX(3)CR1 restricts hepatic fibrosis progression and monocyte accumulation through mechanisms exerted by infiltrating immune cells. In the absence of CX(3)CR1, intrahepatic monocytes develop preferentially into proinflammatory tumor necrosis factor producing and inducible nitric oxide synthase producing macrophages. CX(3)CR1 represents an essential survival signal for hepatic monocyte derived macrophages by activating antiapoptotic bc12 expression. Monocytes/macrophages lacking CX(3)CR1 undergo increased cell death after liver injury, which then perpetuates inflammation, promotes prolonged inflanunatory monocyte infiltration into the liver, and results in enhanced liver fibrosis. Conclusion: CX(3)CR1 limits liver fibrosis in vivo by controlling the differentiation and survival of intrahepatic monocytes. The opposing regulation of CX(3)CR1 and fractalkine in patients suggests that pharmacological augmentation of this pathway may represent a possible therapeutic antifibrotic strategy. (HEPATOLOGY 2010;52:1769-1782)

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