• Critical care medicine · Jul 2018

    Macrophage Polarization Favors Epithelial Repair During Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

    • Marc Garnier, Aude Gibelin, Arnaud A Mailleux, Véronique Leçon, Margarita Hurtado-Nedelec, Jamila Laschet, Grégoire Trebbia, Mathilde Neuville, Sébastien Tanaka, Bruno Crestani, Monique Dehoux, and Christophe Quesnel.
    • Unité INSERM 1152, Université Paris Diderot-Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2018 Jul 1; 46 (7): e692-e701.

    ObjectivesAlveolar macrophage polarization and role on alveolar repair during human acute respiratory distress syndrome remain unclear. This study aimed to determine during human acute respiratory distress syndrome: the alveolar macrophage polarization, the effect of alveolar environment on macrophage polarization, and the role of polarized macrophages on epithelial repair.DesignExperimental ex vivo and in vitro investigations.SettingFour ICUs in three teaching hospitals.PatientsThirty-three patients with early moderate-to-severe acute respiratory distress syndrome were enrolled for assessment of the polarization of alveolar macrophages.InterventionsPolarization of acute respiratory distress syndrome macrophages was studied by flow cytometry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Modulation of macrophage polarization was studied in vitro using phenotypic and functional readouts. Macrophage effect on repair was studied using alveolar epithelial cells in wound healing models.Measurements And Main ResultsEx vivo, alveolar macrophages from early acute respiratory distress syndrome patients exhibited anti-inflammatory characteristics with high CD163 expression and interleukin-10 production. Accordingly, early acute respiratory distress syndrome-bronchoalveolar lavage fluid drives an acute respiratory distress syndrome-specific anti-inflammatory macrophage polarization in vitro, close to that induced by recombinant interleukin-10. Culture supernatants from macrophages polarized in vitro with acute respiratory distress syndrome-bronchoalveolar lavage fluid or interleukin-10 and ex vivo acute respiratory distress syndrome alveolar macrophages specifically promoted lung epithelial repair. Inhibition of the hepatocyte growth factor pathway in epithelial cells and hepatocyte growth factor production in macrophages both reversed this effect. Finally, hepatocyte growth factor and soluble form of CD163 concentrations expressed relatively to macrophage count were higher in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from acute respiratory distress syndrome survivors.ConclusionsEarly acute respiratory distress syndrome alveolar environment drives an anti-inflammatory macrophage polarization favoring epithelial repair through activation of the hepatocyte growth factor pathway. These results suggest that macrophage polarization may be an important step for epithelial repair and acute respiratory distress syndrome recovery.

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