Rationale: Efficient removal of apoptotic cells is essential for the resolution of acute pulmonary inflammation. Alveolar macrophages ingest apoptotic cells less avidly than other professional phagocytes at rest but overcome this defect during acute inflammation. Surfactant protein (SP)-A and SP-D are potent modulators of macrophage function and may suppress clearance of apoptotic cells through activation of the transmembrane receptor signal inhibitory regulatory protein α (SIRPα).
Objectives: To investigate whether binding of SP-A and SP-D to SIRPα on alveolar macrophages suppresses apoptotic cell clearance.
Methods: Phagocytosis of apoptotic cells was assessed using macrophages pretreated with SP-A, SP-D, or the collectin-like molecule C1q. Binding of SP-A and SP-D to SIRPα was confirmed in vitro using blocking antibodies and fibroblasts transfected with active and mutant SIRPα. The effects of downstream molecules SHP-1 and RhoA on phagocytosis were studied using SHP-1–deficient mice, sodium stibogluconate, and a Rho kinase inhibitor. Lipopolysaccharide was given to chimeric mice to study the effects of SP-A and SP-D binding on inflammatory macrophages.
Measurements and Main Results: Preincubation of macrophages with SP-A or SP-D suppressed apoptotic cell clearance. Surfactant suppression of macrophage phagocytosis was reversed by blocking SIRPα and inhibiting downstream molecules SHP-1 and RhoA. Macrophages from inflamed lungs ingested apoptotic cells more efficiently than resting alveolar macrophages. Recruited mononuclear phagocytes with low levels of SP-A and SP-D mediated this effect.
Conclusions: SP-A and SP-D tonically inhibit alveolar macrophage phagocytosis by binding SIRPα. During acute pulmonary inflammation, defects in apoptotic cell clearance are overcome by recruited mononuclear phagocytes.
Apoptotic cell clearance is necessary for resolution of inflammation yet several studies show that resting alveolar macrophages ingest apoptotic cells poorly. Mechanisms to explain improved macrophage phagocytosis during inflammation are incomplete.
In the absence of inflammation, surfactant proteins A and D suppress alveolar macrophage phagocytosis. During acute inflammation, defects in apoptotic cell clearance are overcome by recruited mononuclear phagocytes.
The alveolar macrophage (AM) is considered to be the primary phagocyte in the lung. However, compared with other professional phagocytes, unstimulated AMs clear apoptotic cells poorly both in vivo and in vitro (10–12). During acute inflammation, this defect is overcome, enabling AMs to have a phagocytic capacity similar to that of other professional phagocytes (10). The intriguing hypothesis therefore arises that the normal environment of the lung suppresses phagocytosis, whereas the environment of an inflamed lung promotes apoptotic cell clearance.
This paradigm may reflect the unique environment in which the AM exists. The alveolus constitutes an aerobic environment in which oxygen partial pressures reach 100 mm Hg. In contrast, other macrophages (e.g., peritoneal macrophages [PMs]) may exist in anaerobic environments in which oxygen partial pressures measure 5 mm Hg. The alveolar macrophage is also bathed in fluid that contains high levels of surfactant proteins. Surfactant protein (SP)-A and SP-D in particular play an important role in immune modulation (13–15).
SP-A and SP-D are members of the collectin family of molecules that function as components of the innate immune system by recognizing pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) on microorganisms. Collectins are comprised of N-terminal collagen-like domains linked to C-terminal lectin or carbohydrate recognition domains. Collectin monomers are highly oligomerized, first into trimers and then further to form complex sertiform or cruciate structures. SP-A and SP-D contribute to the innate immunologic response by facilitating removal of pathogens and enhancing the proinflammatory response to infection (14, 16). Conversely, other reports suggest that SP-A and SP-D inhibit proinflammatory mediator production by macrophages (13, 15). We have recently attempted to clarify this paradox by demonstrating that the orientation by which SP-A and SP-D bind to effector cells dictates their pro- or antiinflammatory potential (17). For example, ligation of the N-terminal collagen domains with the calreticulin/CD91 receptor complex is proinflammatory, whereas binding of the C-terminal heads to signal inhibitory regulatory protein α (SIRPα) prevents inflammation. We hypothesize that phagocytosis may be similarly regulated.
SP-A and SP-D have been shown to opsonize apoptotic cells in vitro and to facilitate their phagocytosis by resting AMs (18–20). This effect has been confirmed in vivo and is mediated through CD91 and calreticulin on the phagocyte surface (20). An opposing effect may be seen when SIRPα is activated by SP-A or SP-D. Ligation of this receptor blocks Fcγ receptor and complement-mediated cellular phagocytosis (21, 22). Thus, in the naive lung, binding of SP-A and SP-D to SIRPα on the AM may tonically inhibit apoptotic cell engulfment, resulting in the inefficient uptake observed for these cells. During inflammation, this inhibitory effect may be lifted to facilitate apoptotic cell removal. Herein, we describe the effects of SP-A and SP-D on AM uptake of apoptotic cells during resting and inflammatory conditions.
Detailed methods are provided in the online supplement.
This study was approved by and performed in accordance with the ethical standards of the National Jewish Medical and Research Center Institutional Review Board and the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and National Jewish Medical and Research Center.
Institute for Cancer Research mice (Taconic, Germantown, NY) were used in all murine experiments unless otherwise indicated. SP-D knockout mice were a kind gift from Dr. James Fisher (23). Wild-type C57BL/6 mice, SHP-1−/− (Ptpn6mev/Ptpn6mev) mice, and green fluorescent protein (GFP)–expressing mice (C57BL/6-Tg [UBC-GFP] 30Scha/J) were obtained from Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). Additional details regarding these mouse strains and generation of GFP-expressing chimeric mice can be found in the online supplement.
SP-A was isolated from whole lung lavage fluid taken from patients with pulmonary alveolar proteinosis and stripped of LPS, as previously described (24). Human SP-D was isolated from transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells (17). Harvested medium was purified and stripped of LPS. Purified human C1q (10 μg/ml) was obtained from Quidel Corp. (San Diego, CA).
Human AMs were isolated by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) from normal volunteers (20). Human neutrophils were obtained from healthy donors and isolated via density centrifugation (25). Mouse AMs were isolated by lavage with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing100 μM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. For experiments in which AMs were isolated from LPS-treated mice, purification was performed using density centrifugation (26). Specific details can be found in the online supplement.
Murine J774A.1 macrophages (American Type Culture Collection, Manassas, VA) and Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts (a gift from Dr. A. J. Ridley, Ludwig Institute, London) were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum plus penicillin-streptomycin-glutamine and incubated at 37°C in 10% CO2. Human Jurkat T cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA) and were cultured in RPMI 1640 with 10% fetal bovine serum supplemented with penicillin-streptomycin-glutamine, and incubated at 37°C in 5% CO2. Transient cell transfection of Swiss 3T3 cells with SIRPα constructs was performed using Lipofectamine Plus reagent (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) as detailed in the online supplement.
Human and murine AMs, murine PMs, and J774 A.1 macrophages were plated in 24-well plates at a concentration of 5 × 105 cells/well. After overnight culture, nonadherent cells were gently washed off and either fresh medium or medium containing apoptotic target cells were added. For collectin experiments, SP-A (10 μg/ml), SP-D (10 μg/ml), C1q (10 μg/ml), or CD47-Fc ligand (10 μg/ml) was added for 20 minutes. The cell culture supernatant was then removed, adherent macrophages were gently washed with medium, and apoptotic cells were added at a 10:1 ratio for 90 minutes. Samples were washed before Wright's Giemsa staining to remove uningested apoptotic cells. Phagocytosis was quantified using the phagocytic index previously described (27). For SHP inhibitor studies, sodium stibogluconate was added for 20 minutes at a concentration of 100 μg/ml. For Rho kinase inhibitor studies, Y27632 was added 20 minutes before the addition of the surfactant proteins at a concentration of 10 μM.
Mice were anesthetized with Avertin (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) after which 10 × 106 apoptotic thymocytes were instilled intratracheally in a volume of 50 μl PBS. Sixty minutes later, BAL was performed. Lavage cells were fixed and stained with modified Wright's Giemsa stain. Phagocytosis was determined by visual inspection and was expressed as a phagocytic index as previously described (27). For Rho kinase inhibitor studies, Y27632 was administered by gavage 4 hours before apoptotic cell instillation at a dose of 10 mg/kg.
To distinguish cultured neutrophils from macrophages with flow cytometry, J774 macrophages were labeled with PKH26-PCL fluorescent dye (Sigma-Aldrich) as per the manufacturer's instructions. Macrophages were washed in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium with 10% fetal calf serum twice to remove excess dye. SP-D or SP-A was labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (Sigma-Aldrich) as per the manufacturer's instructions and then added directly to macrophages alone, viable neutrophils alone, apoptotic neutrophils alone, or to 1:1 mixtures containing neutrophils and macrophages for 30 minutes on ice. Samples were washed, fixed and analyzed by flow cytometry.
Data are presented as mean ± SEM of at least three independent experiments. Statistical analysis was performed using two-tailed Student's t test of unpaired samples. For multiple comparisons, data were evaluated by analysis of variance with post hoc analysis by the two-tailed Dunnett test. Significant differences were defined as P < 0.05.
To confirm that resting AMs ingest apoptotic cells less efficiently than other phagocytes, murine alveolar and peritoneal macrophages were coincubated with apoptotic cells (Figure 1A). As shown, the phagocytic ability of AMs was significantly less than that of PMs.
We hypothesized that the alveolar environment contributes to tonic AM suppression and that removal of AMs from the lungs would restore phagocytic function. To test this, we isolated murine AMs and cultured them for extended periods of time. The ability of cultured AMs to ingest apoptotic cells increased significantly after 4 days of culture, and this was further increased at 8 days (Figure 1B). As a second method of separating AMs from the effects of the alveolar environment, we isolated human AMs and cultured them directly or after vigorous washing. Washed AMs exhibited enhanced uptake of apoptotic Jurkat T cells (Figure 1C), suggesting removal of a soluble or easily dissociated factor.
The lung contains high levels of surfactant proteins. We therefore sought to determine if SP-A or SP-D could suppress the phagocytic function of collectin-naive macrophages. J774 mouse macrophages were incubated with SP-A, SP-D, or C1q at concentrations ranging from 1 to 20 μg/ml for 20 minutes. Unbound protein was gently washed away, and apoptotic cells were added (Figures 1D–1F). SP-D suppressed phagocytosis at concentrations of 5 μg/ml and greater. SP-A exhibited similar effects at concentrations of 10 and 20 μg/ml. The collectin-like protein C1q, whose globular head region does not bind to SIRPα (17), enhanced phagocytosis at a concentration of 20 μg/ml but had no effect at lower levels. Concentrations of 10 μg/ml were used for all subsequent experiments.
To determine if the lung collectins could also suppress AM phagocytosis, SP-A and SP-D were added to both washed and unwashed AMs before coincubation with apoptotic cells. For unwashed AMs, both SP-A and SP-D suppressed the phagocytic index to a level below control (Figure 1G). Washed AMs exhibited a higher phagocytic index than unwashed AMs at baseline but had equivalent suppression of phagocytosis once SP-A or SP-D was added. C1q exerted no effect.
SP-D–deficient mice have no detectable SP-D and reduced levels of SP-A (23). We therefore hypothesized that AMs from these mice would escape tonic suppression. To test this, AMs were obtained by BAL, cultured in vitro, and coincubated with apoptotic cells. As expected, AMs from SP-D–deficient mice had a significantly enhanced phagocytic index compared with AMs from wild-type mice (Figure 1H), again suggesting that lung collectins tonically inhibit AM phagocytic function.
SP-D–deficient mice develop chronic low-grade pulmonary inflammation, age-dependent emphysema, and pulmonary fibrosis (23). Increased numbers of apoptotic cells have also been reported in their airways (28). To address whether the enhanced phagocytic ingestions we observed in our ex vivo experiments resulted from in situ phagocytosis of endogenous airway cells, we performed BAL and analyzed the cells with light microscopy. AMs from SP-D–deficient mice were foamy in their appearance and greater in number than AMs lavaged from wild-type mice but contained no observable apoptotic bodies. Staining with annexin V and propidium iodide detected very few apoptotic cells in BAL from our SP-D–deficient mice and from wild-type control animals (data not shown).
Several groups, including our own, have demonstrated that SP-A and SP-D can opsonize apoptotic cells and enhance their removal (18–20). This effect is mediated by a common CD91/calreticulin complex on the phagocyte surface. Because this result is in direct contrast to our data that show collectins suppress macrophage function, we sought to determine the dominant effect by adding collectins to either J774 macrophages or apoptotic neutrophils before performing phagocytosis assays (Figure 2). As with our previous experiments, pretreating macrophages with SP-A or SP-D significantly reduced phagocytosis. Pretreating apoptotic neutrophils with collectins did not enhance the phagocytic index above control levels but did serve to offset macrophage suppression. We suggest that this latter circumstance most closely approximates in vivo conditions in the alveolus in which collectin-opsonized apoptotic cells are the most common targets for collectin-suppressed AMs.
We have previously shown that surfactant proteins can bind to SIRPα (17). Others have shown that ligation of SIRPα by CD47 results in decreased clearance of C3 and IgG opsonized cells (21, 22). To confirm that the inhibitory effects of the lung collectins occur through SIRPα, J774 macrophages were treated with a blocking antibody to SIRPα before the addition of SP-A, SP-D, or CD47-Fc ligand (Figure 3A). As anticipated, SP-A and SP-D failed to reduce apoptotic cell ingestion in macrophages pretreated with the anti-SIRPα blocking antibody. In contrast, SP-A and SP-D significantly suppressed phagocytosis of control macrophages treated with a rat IgG isotype, suggesting that SP-A and SP-D mediate their suppressive effect through SIRPα.
To further verify that the pulmonary collectins inhibit apoptotic cell removal via SIRPα activation, we transfected Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts (a cell line that does not contain SIRPα de novo) with intact SIRPα or a mutant form in which all four tyrosines in the intracellular domain had been substituted with asparagine (29). SP-A and soluble CD47-Fc ligand, a known binding partner of SIRPα, significantly reduced apoptotic cell uptake in cells transfected with the intact SIRPα (Figure 3B). In contrast, SP-A and CD47-Fc ligand did not suppress phagocytosis in cells transfected with an empty vector or the altered, inactive SIRPα.
The cytoplasmic region of SIRPα contains two immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motifs, which recruit and activate SHP-1 and SHP-2 (30). SHP-1 is the major phosphatase associated with SIRPα in macrophages (31), and its activation negatively regulates Fcγ receptor–mediated phagocytosis (32). We have previously demonstrated that SHP-1 is activated by SIRPα upon binding with SP-A or SP-D (17) and therefore sought to determine if SHP activation contributes to tonic suppression of AM phagocytosis. Murine AMs and PMs were cultured in the presence of sodium stibogluconate, a known inhibitor of SHPs (33), and then coincubated with apoptotic Jurkat T cells. Inhibition of SHPs restored the phagocytic ability of AMs to a level equal to that of resting PMs (Figure 4A). Interestingly, SHP inhibition had no effect on the phagocytic ability of PMs, which are not exposed in vivo to surfactant collectins.
To further verify that tonic inhibition of AM phagocytosis is mediated through SHP-1, AMs from viable motheaten mice (mev/mev) were used. These mice contain a point mutation in the SHP-1 gene and express catalytically defective SHP-1 (34). AMs from the motheaten mice had significantly enhanced phagocytic function compared with AMs from wild-type mice (Figure 4B). To verify that the SHP-1 defect did not result in a general phagocytic defect, we also isolated PMs and measured their phagocytic ability. No significant difference was observed in apoptotic cell clearance between wild-type PMs and PMs from motheaten mice. When considered in the context of previous publications (17, 29, 30, 35), our findings suggest that tonic suppression of AM phagocytic function results from collectin-mediated activation of SIRPα and its downstream effector, SHP-1.
Rho-family GTPases are small GTP binding proteins essential for cytoskeletal reorganization and pseudopod formation. RhoA is a member of this family and is a negative regulator of phagocytosis through the activation of Rho kinase. Ligation of SIRPα with CD47 activates RhoA (36). In addition, SHP-1 phosphorylation impairs phagocytosis through inhibition of Rac, which has been shown to reciprocally activate RhoA (32). Because RhoA negatively regulates engulfment of apoptotic cells, we sought to determine if surfactant-mediated activation of RhoA is responsible for suppressed AM phagocytosis. As a first step, J774 macrophages were pretreated with a selective inhibitor of Rho kinase (Y27632) before addition of the surfactant proteins (Figure 5A). As with our previous experiments, SP-A and SP-D significantly reduced macrophage phagocytosis. However, this effect was fully abrogated by the Rho kinase inhibitor.
To investigate whether RhoA actively contributes to the tonic suppression exhibited by AMs, we performed phagocytosis assays on murine AMs and PMs in culture (Figure 5B). Phagocytosis was significantly enhanced in AMs treated with the inhibitor and reached levels equivalent to those of PMs. Importantly, inhibiting Rho kinase had no effect on PMs, a cell population that is not exposed to the alveolar environment. To further verify that RhoA contributes to AM suppression, we proceeded with in vivo experiments in which we instilled apoptotic thymocytes directly into the lungs of mice treated with the Rho kinase inhibitor. As with our in vitro studies, inhibiting Rho kinase significantly enhanced apoptotic cell clearance (Figure 5C). In total, these experiments suggest that the tonically inhibited phenotype of the AM results from SP-A and SP-D and is mediated through SHP-1 and activation of RhoA.
Massive numbers of neutrophils migrate to the airspaces in community-acquired pneumonia and the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), yet the burden of apoptotic cells is surprisingly low (37–39). We therefore questioned if the tonic suppression displayed by resting AMs could be overcome during acute inflammation. To model bacterial pneumonia, LPS was delivered to mice via direct intratracheal instillation. Brisk neutrophil accumulation occurred in the lungs within 24 hours and peaked at 72 hours. Macrophage counts increased beginning at Day 3 and peaked at Day 7 (Figure 6A). We selected Post-LPS Days 3 and 6 as optimal time points to study apoptotic cell clearance because they represented peak inflammation and neutrophil decline. Because high numbers of neutrophils were present in BAL fluid at both times, AMs were purified by density centrifugation before coculture with apoptotic cells. In line with the findings of Newman and colleagues (10), phagocytosis was significantly enhanced in inflammatory macrophages compared with resting AMs (Figure 6B).
To determine if the phagocytic capacity of inflammatory AMs could be altered by SP-A or SP-D, we repeated the ex vivo phagocytosis assay using inflammatory AMs obtained on Post-LPS Day 6. Pretreating the macrophages with SP-A or SP-D (but not C1q) significantly reduced phagocytosis, although levels remained elevated above those of resting AMs (Figure 6C).
AM numbers increased fivefold in our model of LPS-induced inflammation (Figure 6A). We therefore asked whether the observed increase in phagocytosis during inflammation resulted from enhanced function of resident AMs (RAMs) or if mononuclear phagocytes recruited from the bloodstream were the prime contributors to apoptotic cell clearance. To answer this question, bone marrow transplantation was performed on γ-irradiated mice to create chimeras in which bone marrow–derived cells constitutively express GFP, but RAMs were GFP negative. A high percentage of macrophages in BAL expressed GFP after LPS (76.1 ± 13.4% on Day 3, 86.3 ± 4.3% on Day 6, vs. 14.3 ± 4.3% in untreated mice; P < 0.001), indicating that the majority of phagocytes in the airspaces were recruited mononuclear phagocytes rather then RAMs. When these two populations were separated via fluorescence-activated cell sorting and cultured ex vivo, recruited mononuclear phagocytes cleared apoptotic cells more effectively than resident macrophages (Figure 7A), suggesting that recruited mononuclear phagocytes play a major role in apoptotic cell clearance during inflammation. RAMs from LPS-injured lungs also exhibited enhanced phagocytic capacity, but to a lesser degree than recruited mononuclear phagocytes.
To further verify that recruited mononuclear phagocytes contribute to clearance of apoptotic neutrophils and aid in resolving inflammation, we again treated GFP-expressing chimeras with LPS. Bronchoalveolar specimens were taken directly to a fluorescence-activated cell sorter where GFP-negative (resident) and GFP-positive (recruited) macrophage populations were separated. Cytospins of sorted samples were then examined by light microscopy for the presence of endogenously ingested apoptotic cells. In concordance with our ex vivo phagocytosis assays, recruited mononuclear phagocytes contained significantly more apoptotic bodies then RAMs (Figure 7B), suggesting that they were the phagocytes responsible for the majority of apoptotic cell clearance.
Our previous experiments demonstrated that SP-A and SP-D suppress macrophage phagocytic function when bound to SIRPα. Therefore, we sought to determine if differences in binding of SP-A or SP-D to resident versus recruited macrophages would explain alterations in phagocytic capacity during inflammation. BAL was performed on GFP-expressing chimeric mice 3 and 6 days after LPS administration. Antibodies to SP-A and SP-D were added and cells were analyzed using flow cytometry. RAMs exhibited higher levels of SP-D and SP-A than recruited mononuclear phagocytes at rest (Day 0) and during inflammation (Figure 7C). In contrast, SIRPα levels were similar on both cell populations (data not shown).
Because large numbers of neutrophils turn over in the airspaces during inflammation and the lung collectins are capable of binding apoptotic cells (18, 20), we considered the possibility that free collectins preferentially bind apoptotic cells rather than incoming mononuclear phagocytes. To test this theory, we added fluorescently labeled SP-D to collectin-naive macrophages and apoptotic neutrophils (Figure 7D). In isolation, each cell type effectively bound SP-D. However, when SP-D was added to a mixed population of macrophages and apoptotic neutrophils, the apoptotic cells were preferentially opsonized. Experiments with SP-A yielded similar results, with SP-A preferentially binding to apoptotic neutrophils over macrophages. In the inflammatory milieu of the LPS-injured lung, this effect could promote apoptotic cell clearance by dual mechanisms that include diversion of free collectins from incoming mononuclear phagocytes and direct opsonization of apoptotic cells. The former would allow recruited mononuclear phagocytes to escape SIRPα-mediated suppression of phagocytic function, whereas the latter would facilitate ingestion of apoptotic neutrophils by both RAMs and recruited mononuclear phagocytes.
The human respiratory tract is constantly exposed to inhaled particles, environmental antigens, and microorganisms. These substances have the potential to induce massive inflammation and lung injury, yet under most circumstances their removal is virtually silent. In the proximal airways, clearance occurs via the mucociliary apparatus and cough reflex. More distally, pathogens and particles are engulfed by AMs and cleared in situ. To prevent collateral damage to the delicate gas exchange structures of the alveolus, the AM is held in a quiescent state in which inflammatory cytokine production and antigen presentation are tonically suppressed (40–42). Our previous work suggests that interaction of the C-terminal heads of SP-A and SP-D with SIRPα may in part drive this phenotype (17).
AMs ingest apoptotic cells less avidly than other tissue macrophages (10, 11). In the studies detailed herein, we show that removing the AM from the lung environment improves its ability to ingest apoptotic cells. Adding SP-A or SP-D back to the AM restores the suppressed phenotype. In a similar vein, the addition of SP-A or SP-D to collectin-naive macrophages also suppresses phagocytic function. On initial inspection, it appears that these findings contradict with those of Schagat and colleagues, Reidy and coworkers, and our own group who previously reported that SP-A and SP-D enhanced apoptotic cell clearance (18–20). An important distinction between the former studies and the current one is the order in which pulmonary collectins were added to culture conditions. In the current study, macrophages were coincubated with SP-A or SP-D and then washed to remove excess and unbound surfactant proteins before apoptotic cells were added. This resulted in suppression of AM function but did not allow for opsonization of the apoptotic targets. In comparison, prior studies added pulmonary collectins and apoptotic cells to cultured AMs simultaneously. This permitted opsonization of apoptotic targets and facilitated their ingestion. Importantly, when Vandivier and colleagues added target cells to macrophages that had been incubated on SP-A– or SP-D–coated plates, phagocytosis was significantly reduced (20), supporting our current findings. We suggest that in the resting, noninflamed lung, the lung collectins have dual effects. On one hand, they suppress AM phagocytic function through tonic interaction with SIRPα. On the other, they enhance apoptotic cell removal by opsonizing apoptotic cells and facilitating their removal through CD91. The net effect permits low-level phagocytosis of apoptotic cells by resting AMs during times of health, yet maintains their quiescent phenotype.
Studies with SP-D–deficient mice support this paradigm. Targeted inactivation of the SP-D gene results in AM activation, chronic low-grade pulmonary inflammation, age-dependent emphysema, and pulmonary fibrosis (23). Not surprisingly, we found that AMs from these animals had a greater ability to ingest apoptotic cells in vitro than AMs from wild-type control animals. We hypothesize that this activated macrophage phenotype results from loss of tonic SIRPα activation by the collectins. In vivo, AMs from SP-D–deficient mice remain activated but removal of apoptotic cells from the lungs is impaired, a finding that we have previously attributed to incomplete opsonization of apoptotic cells by the collectins (20). The end result is chronic AM activation and impaired apoptotic cell removal.
The use of purified SP-A and SP-D is a potential limitation of our study. In the lungs, SP-A and SP-D associate closely with other surfactant constituents, including phospholipids and carbohydrates. It is possible that these molecules may affect AM function, either through direct interaction with the cell or by altering collectin activity. Because phospholipids comprise 90% of the surfactant layer, future studies of these molecules are essential.
In the absence of inflammation, there may be little need for the AM to clear apoptotic cells. AMs and epithelial cells comprise the main cell types in contact with the alveolar lumen. The turnover rate of the AM is extremely low, with an estimated lifespan of over 6 months (43). Therefore, very few AMs undergo apoptosis at any given time. Little is known about the lifespan of type I and type II alveolar epithelial cells, but their turnover rate may be similarly low. In the rare instances in which apoptotic cells are present in the distal airspaces, epithelial cells may perform the lion's share of phagocytosis. Recently, we have reported that mammary epithelial cells are predominantly responsible for clearance of apoptotic cells during mammary involution (44), whereas others have noted robust clearance of apoptotic eosinophils by airway epithelial cells (45, 46).
During acute inflammation, removal of dying cells is a necessity. In ARDS and in community-acquired pneumonia, neutrophil concentrations in the airspaces can exceed 7×106/ml (39). Surprisingly, less than 1.5% of the observed cells are apoptotic and even fewer are necrotic (37, 39), suggesting robust apoptotic cell clearance. Our data support the findings of Newman and colleagues and Reidy and coworkers (10, 19) and indicate that inflammatory macrophages have enhanced phagocytic capacity. We have extended their findings to show that mononuclear phagocytes recruited from the bloodstream and bone marrow are significant contributors to this phenomenon. Previous studies have shown that monocyte-derived macrophages can develop the capacity to ingest apoptotic cells in vitro (47). Endotoxin accelerates the rate at which this occurs and can enhance phagocytic potential (48). Cytokines found in the lungs during inflammation, such as granulocyte-macrophage colony–stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and IL-1β can have similar effects (49). In our system, clearance of apoptotic neutrophils is maximal 3 to 6 days after LPS. At these time points, over 80% of macrophages in the airspaces are of bone marrow origin. Because their phagocytic capacity is two to five times greater than that of RAMs, they account for over 90% of the phagocytic ingestions.
Our experiments did not explore the clearance of apoptotic cells at the initiation of inflammation. In our model, recruited mononuclear phagocytes are absent from the airspaces for the first 48 hours after LPS administration, yet apoptotic neutrophils are rare. Inflammatory cytokines such as GM-CSF, IL-1β, and IL-8 are present in acute lung injury and may provide one explanation because they protect neutrophils from apoptosis. A second possibility is that RAMs are stimulated in early lung injury. Our ex vivo experiments support this notion and show enhanced phagocytic function of RAMs 3 days after LPS.
Enhanced phagocytosis by recruited mononuclear phagocytes may not hold true for all inflammatory stimuli. A recent study by Jennings and colleagues used sheep red blood cells to induce lymphocyte-predominant inflammation in the lungs (12). Under these circumstances, the phagocytic ability of recruited mononuclear phagocytes was poor and remained inferior to that of RAMs. Although differences in the initiating inflammatory stimulus and the degree of tissue injury between the two models may explain this effect, so may differences in apoptotic target cells, because macrophages may have unique mechanisms for recognizing apoptotic neutrophils (50). We cannot rule out the possibility that the radiation used to create our GFP-expressing chimeric mice affected RAM function, although we believe this is unlikely. The lungs of our mice were protected during radiation by lead shields and no evidence of radiation lung injury was detectable by BAL or histology (data not shown). Furthermore, RAMs from transplanted and wild-type mice exhibited similar levels of apoptotic cell clearance in vitro.
The roles of SP-A and SP-D in apoptotic cell clearance during inflammation remain undefined. In our system, cell surface levels of SP-A and SP-D remained constant on RAMs during inflammation, whereas levels on recruited mononuclear phagocytes were reduced. SIRPα levels were similar on both cell types, and we believe that the molecule is active because incubating inflammatory macrophages with SP-A and SP-D reduces their phagocytic capacity.
In an attempt to correlate cell surface levels of SP-A and SP-D with levels of free collectins in the airspaces, we performed Western blotting on cell-free supernatants from lavage fluid of LPS-treated mice (data not shown). Interestingly, SP-A and SP-D levels were increased 3 days after LPS, but decreased on Day 6. These levels may not provide an accurate reflection of total collectin content in the alveolus because SP-A is highly lipid bound and only a small portion is present in the aqueous phase. SP-D is more accessible in BAL, but total levels are 10-fold lower than SP-A. Moreover, neutrophil-derived proteases that are present during inflammation can alter collectin structure and function. Therefore, we do not know if the SP-A and SP-D measured from the BAL is capable of binding to macrophage receptors.
As inflammation progresses, the production of SP-A and SP-D may be reduced due to alveolar epithelial cell dysfunction. In addition, high numbers of cells rapidly undergoing apoptosis (and subsequent phagocytic cell clearance) may bind free collectins and serve as a sink for their removal. Indeed, SP-A levels are reduced in the lavage fluid of patients suffering from ARDS, acute lung injury after trauma, sepsis, and pneumonia (51, 52). SP-D has been less well studied in lung injury but may be reduced in some patients with ARDS (51). Decreased binding of SP-A or SP-D to SIRPα (as a result of competition from apoptotic cells or from reduced surfactant protein levels) provides one mechanism by which recruited mononuclear phagocytes escape collectin-mediated suppression. In addition, SIRPα receptor complexes on recruited mononuclear phagocytes and RAMs may have differential SP-A and SP-D binding affinity.
Our findings explain the longstanding dichotomous observations that AMs ingest apoptotic cells poorly but that few apoptotic cells are present in the lungs during inflammation. Herein we have demonstrated that, in the absence of inflammation, SP-A and SP-D suppress AM phagocytic function by binding to SIRPα and altering the activity of its downstream effectors SHP-1 and RhoA. During LPS-induced inflammation, recruited mononuclear phagocytes escape collectin-mediated inhibition and are major contributors to apoptotic cell clearance.
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