4.7 Article

Heightened turnover and failed maturation of monocyte-derived macrophages in murine chronic granulomatous disease

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 139, Issue 11, Pages 1707-1721

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2021011798

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [RAI141389, T32 AI740529]
  2. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute [RHL149741A]

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Loss of NADPH oxidase activity in chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) leads to altered phagocyte responses and exaggerated inflammation. The absence of Nox2 in monocyte-derived macrophages (MoMacs) results in impaired maturation and persistent recruitment during zymosan-induced peritonitis in CGD mice.
Loss of NADPH oxidase activity leads to altered phagocyte responses and exaggerated inflammation in chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). We sought to assess the effects of Nox2 absence on monocyte-derived macrophages (MoMacs) in gp91phox-/y mice during zymosan-induced peritonitis. MoMacs from CGD and wild-type (WT) peritonea were characterized over time after zymosan injection. Although numbers lavaged from both genotypes were virtually identical, there were marked differences in maturation: newly recruited WT MoMacs rapidly enlarged and matured, losing Ly6C and gaining MHCII, CD206, and CD36, whereas CGD MoMacs remained small and were mostly Ly6C1MHCII-. RNA-sequencing analyses showed few intrinsic differences between genotypes in newly recruited MoMacs but significant differences with time. WT MoMacs displayed changes in metabolism, adhesion, and reparative functions, whereas CGD MoMacs remained inflammatory. PKH dye labeling revealed that although WT MoMacs were mostly recruited within the first 24 hours and remained in the peritoneum while maturing and enlarging, CGD monocytes streamed into the peritoneum for days, with many migrating to the diaphragm where they were found in fibrin(ogen) clots surrounding clusters of neutrophils in nascent pyogranulomata. Importantly, these observations seemed to be driven by milieu: adoptive transfer of CGD MoMacs into inflamed peritonea of WT mice resulted in immunophenotypic maturation and normal behavior, whereas altered maturation/behavior of WT MoMacs resulted from transfer into inflamed peritonea of CGD mice. In addition, Nox2-deficient MoMacs behaved similarly to their Nox2-sufficient counterparts within the largely WT milieu of mixed bone marrow chimeras. These data show persistent recruitment with fundamental failure of MoMac maturation in CGD.

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