Abstract

Macrophage G2A and CD36 lipid receptors are thought to mediate efferocytosis following tissue injury and thereby prevent excessive inflammation that could compromise tissue repair. To test this, we subjected mice lacking G2A or CD36 receptor to bleomycin-induced lung injury and measured efferocytosis, inflammation, and fibrosis. Loss of CD36 (but not G2A) delayed clearance of apoptotic alveolar cells (mean 78% increase in apoptotic cells 7 days postinjury), potentiated inflammation (mean 56% increase in lung neutrophils and 75% increase in lung KC levels 7 days postinjury, 51% increase in lung macrophages 14 days postinjury), and reduced lung fibrosis (mean 41% and 29% reduction 14 and 21 days postinjury, respectively). Reduced fibrosis in CD36(-/-) mice was associated with lower levels of profibrotic TH2 cytokines (IL-9, IL-13, IL-4), decreased expression of the M2 macrophage marker Arginase-1, and reduced interstitial myofibroblasts. G2A, on the other hand, was required for optimal clearance of apoptotic neutrophils during zymosan-induced peritoneal inflammation (50.3% increase in apoptotic neutrophils and 30.6% increase in total neutrophils 24 h following zymosan administration in G2A(-/-) mice). Thus, CD36 is required for timely removal of apoptotic cells in the context of lung injury and modulates subsequent inflammatory and fibrotic processes relevant to fibrotic lung disease.

Highlights

  • Macrophage G2A and CD36 lipid receptors are thought to mediate efferocytosis following tissue injury and thereby prevent excessive inflammation that could compromise tissue repair

  • A role for CD36 in apoptotic cell clearance in vivo has hitherto only been demonstrated in a skin punch wound healing assay using CD36Ϫ/Ϫ mice [6]

  • The modulatory effects of CD36 on subsequent inflammatory and fibrotic events reveal the importance of this receptor in regulating processes that are pathophysiologically relevant to idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF)

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Summary

Introduction

Macrophage G2A and CD36 lipid receptors are thought to mediate efferocytosis following tissue injury and thereby prevent excessive inflammation that could compromise tissue repair. We subjected mice lacking G2A or CD36 receptor to bleomycin-induced lung injury and measured efferocytosis, inflammation, and fibrosis. The timely removal of apoptotic cells by phagocytic macrophages (efferocytosis) is vital for the preservation of normal tissue homeostasis [1, 2]. Defects in this fundamentally important process in the context of tissue. The rapid and efficient clearance of apoptotic cells is vital for the normal resolution of inflammation and orchestration of subsequent tissue repair mechanisms following injury [4]. An in vivo role for CD36 in efferocytosis has been demonstrated in very limited

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