4.7 Article

The Human Monocyte-A Circulating Sensor of Infection and a Potent and Rapid Inducer of Inflammation

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23073890

关键词

monocyte; macrophage; cytokine; chemokine; cytokine storm; LPS; inflammatory response; antigen presentation; G-CSF; IL-6

资金

  1. Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation [KAW 2017.0022]

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Monocytes, a unique population distinct from most tissue macrophages, primarily originate from adult bone marrow along with intestinal macrophages. They respond rapidly to LPS stimulation by producing high amounts of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. These findings strongly support the role of monocytes as potent mobile sensors of infection and activators of a strong inflammatory response.
Monocytes were previously thought to be the precursors of all tissue macrophages but have recently been found to represent a unique population of cells, distinct from the majority of tissue macrophages. Monocytes and intestinal macrophages seem now to be the only monocyte/macrophage populations that originate primarily from adult bone marrow. To obtain a better view of the biological function of monocytes and how they differ from tissue macrophages, we have performed a quantitative analysis of its transcriptome in vivo and after in vitro stimulation with E. coli LPS. The monocytes rapidly responded to LPS by producing extremely high amounts of mRNA for the classical inflammatory cytokines, IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6 and TNF-alpha, but almost undetectable amounts of other cytokines. IL-6 was upregulated 58,000 times, from almost undetectable levels at baseline to become one of the major transcripts already after a few hours of cultivation. The cells also showed very strong upregulation of a number of chemokines, primarily IL-8, Ccl2, Ccl3, Ccl3L3, Ccl20, Cxcl2, Cxcl3 and Cxcl4. IL-8 became the most highly expressed transcript in the monocytes already after four hours of in vitro culture in the presence of LPS. A high baseline level of MHC class II chains and marked upregulation of super oxide dismutase (SOD2), complement factor B, complement factor C3 and coagulation factor 3 (F3; tissue factor) at four hours of in vitro culture were also observed. This indicates a rapid protective response to high production of oxygen radicals, to increase complement activation and possibly also be an inducer of local coagulation. Overall, these findings give strong support for monocytes acting primarily as potent mobile sensors of infection and rapid activators of a strong inflammatory response.

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