Abstract

Rationale: Acute respiratory distress syndrome is defined by the presence of systemic hypoxia and consequent on disordered neutrophilic inflammation. Local mechanisms limiting the duration and magnitude of this neutrophilic response remain poorly understood.Objectives: To test the hypothesis that during acute lung inflammation tissue production of proresolution type 2 cytokines (IL-4 and IL-13) dampens the proinflammatory effects of hypoxia through suppression of HIF-1α (hypoxia-inducible factor-1α)-mediated neutrophil adaptation, resulting in resolution of lung injury.Methods: Neutrophil activation of IL4Ra (IL-4 receptor α) signaling pathways was explored ex vivo in human acute respiratory distress syndrome patient samples, in vitro after the culture of human peripheral blood neutrophils with recombinant IL-4 under conditions of hypoxia, and in vivo through the study of IL4Ra-deficient neutrophils in competitive chimera models and wild-type mice treated with IL-4.Measurements and Main Results: IL-4 was elevated in human BAL from patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, and its receptor was identified on patient blood neutrophils. Treatment of human neutrophils with IL-4 suppressed HIF-1α–dependent hypoxic survival and limited proinflammatory transcriptional responses. Increased neutrophil apoptosis in hypoxia, also observed with IL-13, required active STAT signaling, and was dependent on expression of the oxygen-sensing prolyl hydroxylase PHD2. In vivo, IL-4Ra–deficient neutrophils had a survival advantage within a hypoxic inflamed niche; in contrast, inflamed lung treatment with IL-4 accelerated resolution through increased neutrophil apoptosis.Conclusions: We describe an important interaction whereby IL4Rα-dependent type 2 cytokine signaling can directly inhibit hypoxic neutrophil survival in tissues and promote resolution of neutrophil-mediated acute lung injury.

Highlights

  • IL-4 Receptor a Signaling Pathways Are Present in the Airways of Patients with Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), Circulating Neutrophils, and in a Mouse Model of ARDS To determine whether patients with ARDS have evidence of local production of IL-4, we measured IL-4 levels in BAL samples of patients with ARDS compared with healthy control subjects

  • To confirm the ability of circulating neutrophils to respond to IL-4 in the context of physiologic hypoxia, we examined neutrophil expression of IL4Ra

  • Healthy human blood neutrophils demonstrated IL4Ra surface protein expression and transcript when cultured in normoxia (21% O2) and hypoxia (1% O2), with loss of surface protein and induction of mRNA after stimulation with IL-4 (Figures 1C and 1D)

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Summary

Objectives

To test the hypothesis that during acute lung inflammation tissue production of proresolution type 2 cytokines (IL-4 and IL-13) dampens the proinflammatory effects of hypoxia through suppression of HIF-1a (hypoxia-inducible factor-1a)mediated neutrophil adaptation, resulting in resolution of lung injury

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