4.6 Article

Nonclassical Resident Macrophages Are Important Determinants in the Development of Myocardial Fibrosis

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 185, Issue 4, Pages 927-942

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2014.11.027

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institute of Health Research grant [324531]
  2. CIHR doctoral scholarship
  3. NSHRF doctoral scholarship
  4. BrightRed Graduate Research Award
  5. Killam Laureate

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Macrophages are increasingly recognized as a potential therapeutic target in myocardial fibrosis via interactions with fibroblasts. We have characterized macrophage depletion and inhibition of nonclassical macrophage migration, in addition to direct interactions between nonclassical macrophages and fibroblasts in angiotensin II (AngII)-mediated, hypertensive myocardial fibrosis. Macrophage depletion was achieved by daily i.v. clodronate Liposomes (-1 day to +3 days) during AngII infusion. Cx3cr1(-/-) mice were used to inhibit nonclassical macrophage migration. Macrophage phenotype (F4/80, CD11b, Ly6C) was characterized by immunotluorescence and flow cytometry. Collagen was assessed by Sirius Red/Fast Green. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR was performed for transcript Levels. AngII/wild-type (WT) mice displayed significant infiltrate and fibrosis compared with saline/WT, which was virtually ablated by clodronate liposomes independent of hypertension. In vitro data supported M2 macrophages promoting fibroblast differentiation and collagen production. AngII/Cx3cr1(-/-) mice, however, significantly increased macrophage infiltrate and fibrosis relative to AngII/WT. AngII/Cx3cr1(-/-) mice also showed an M1 phenotypic shift relative to WT mice in, which the predominant phenotype was Ly6C(low), CD206(+) (M2). Myocardial IL-1 beta was significantly up-regulated, whereas transforming growth factor beta down-regulated with this M1 shift. We demonstrated that infiltrating macrophages are critical to AngII-mediated myocardial fibrosis by preventing the development of fibrosis after liposomal depletion of circulating monocytes. Our findings also suggest that some macrophages, namely M2, may confer a protective myocardial environment that may prevent excessive tissue injury.

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