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Local microvascular leakage promotes trafficking of activated neutrophils to remote organs

Authors :
Owen-Woods, Charlotte
Joulia, Regis
Barkaway, Anna
Rolas, Loic
Ma, Bin
Nottebaum, Astrid Fee
Arkill, Kenton P.
Stein, Monja
Girbl, Tamara
Golding, Matthew
Bates, David O.
Vestweber, Dietmar
Voisin, Mathieu-Benoit
Nourshargh, Sussan
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. May, 2020, Vol. 130 Issue 5, p2301, 18 p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Increased microvascular permeability to plasma proteins and neutrophil emigration are hallmarks of innate immunity and key features of numerous inflammatory disorders. Although neutrophils can promote microvascular leakage, the impact of vascular permeability on neutrophil trafficking is unknown. Here, through the application of confocal intravital microscopy, we report that vascular permeability-enhancing stimuli caused a significant frequency of neutrophil reverse transendothelial cell migration (rTEM). Furthermore, mice with a selective defect in microvascular permeability enhancement (VEC-Y685F-ki) showed reduced incidence of neutrophil rTEM. Mechanistically, elevated vascular leakage promoted movement of interstitial chemokines into the bloodstream, a response that supported abluminal-to-luminal neutrophil TEM. Through development of an in vivo cell labeling method we provide direct evidence for the systemic dissemination of rTEM neutrophils, and showed them to exhibit an activated phenotype and be capable of trafficking to the lungs where their presence was aligned with regions of vascular injury. Collectively, we demonstrate that increased microvascular leakage reverses the localization of directional cues across venular walls, thus causing neutrophils engaged in diapedesis to reenter the systemic circulation. This cascade of events offers a mechanism to explain how local tissue inflammation and vascular permeability can induce downstream pathological effects in remote organs, most notably in the lungs.<br />Introduction Acute inflammation is a critically important pathophysiological response to a local stimulus (e.g., bacterial infection) characterized by local tissue infiltration of neutrophils and tissue swelling (edema). These responses typically [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
130
Issue :
5
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.624327935
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI133661