4.7 Article

TREM-2 promotes macrophage survival and lung disease after respiratory viral infection

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JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
卷 212, 期 5, 页码 681-697

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ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20141732

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health (OD and NIAID) [AADCRC U19-AI07048]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NHLBI) [T32-HL-007317, P50-HL-084922, P01-HL-029594, R01-HL-073159, R01-HL-121791]
  3. Martin Schaeffer Fund

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Viral infections and type 2 immune responses are thought to be critical for the development of chronic respiratory disease, but the link between these events needs to be better defined. Here, we study a mouse model in which infection with a mouse parainfluenza virus known as Sendai virus (SeV) leads to long-term activation of innate immune cells that drive IL-13-dependent lung disease. We find that chronic postviral disease (signified by formation of excess airway mucus and accumulation of M2-differentiating lung macrophages) requires macrophage expression of triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-2 (TREM-2). Analysis of mechanism shows that viral replication increases lung macrophage levels of intracellular and cell surface TREM-2, and this action prevents macrophage apoptosis that would otherwise occur during the acute illness (5-12 d after inoculation). However, the largest increases in TREM-2 levels are found as the soluble form (sTREM-2) long after clearance of infection (49 d after inoculation). At this time, IL-13 and the adapter protein DAP12 promote TREM-2 cleavage to sTREM-2 that is unexpectedly active in preventing macrophage apoptosis. The results thereby define an unprecedented mechanism for a feed-forward expansion of lung macrophages (with IL-13 production and consequent M2 differentiation) that further explains how acute infection leads to chronic inflammatory disease.

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