4.8 Article

Human interleukin-4-treated regulatory macrophages promote epithelial wound healing and reduce colitis in a mouse model

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 6, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aba4376

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Funding

  1. Crohn's Colitis Canada

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Murine alternatively activated macrophages can exert anti-inflammatory effects. We sought to determine if IL-4-treated human macrophages [i.e., hM(IL4)] would promote epithelial wound repair and can serve as a cell transfer treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Blood monocytes from healthy volunteers and patients with active and inactive IBD were converted to hM(IL4)s. IL-4 treatment of blood-derived macrophages from healthy volunteers and patients with inactive IBD resulted in a characteristic CD206(+)CCL18(+)CD14(low)(/-) phenotype (RNA-seq revealed IL-4 affected expression of 996 genes). Conditioned media from freshly generated or cryopreserved hM(IL4)s promoted epithelial wound healing in part by TGF, and reduced cytokine-driven loss of epithelial barrier function in vitro. Systemic delivery of hM(IL4) to dinitrobenzene sulphonic acid (DNBS)-treated Rag1(-/-) mice significantly reduced disease. These findings from in vitro and in vivo analyses provide proof-of-concept support for the development of autologous M(IL4) transfer as a cellular immunotherapy for IBD.

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