Published in

American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 5(182), p. 3084-3094, 2009

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0803463

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Alternatively Activated Macrophages Elicited by Helminth Infection Can Be Reprogrammed to Enable Microbial Killing

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The prime function of classically activated macrophages (activated by Th1-type signals, such as IFN-gamma) is microbial destruction. Alternatively activated macrophages (activated by Th2 cytokines, such as IL-4 and IL-13) play important roles in allergy and responses to helminth infection. We utilize a murine model of filarial infection, in which adult nematodes are surgically implanted into the peritoneal cavity of mice, as an in vivo source of alternatively activated macrophages. At 3 wk postinfection, the peritoneal exudate cell population is dominated by macrophages, termed nematode-elicited macrophages (NeMphi), that display IL-4-dependent features such as the expression of arginase 1, RELM-alpha (resistin-like molecule alpha), and Ym1. Since increasing evidence suggests that macrophages show functional adaptivity, the response of NeMphi to proinflammatory Th1-activating signals was investigated to determine whether a switch between alternative and classical activation could occur in macrophages differentiated in an in vivo infection setting. Despite the long-term exposure to Th2 cytokines and antiinflammatory signals in vivo, we found that NeMphi were not terminally differentiated but could develop a more classically activated phenotype in response to LPS and IFN-gamma. This was reflected by a switch in the enzymatic pathway for arginine metabolism from arginase to inducible NO synthase and the reduced expression of RELM-alpha and Ym1. Furthermore, this enabled NeMphi to become antimicrobial, as LPS/IFN-gamma-treated NeMphi produced NO that mediated killing of Leishmania mexicana. However, the adaptation to antimicrobial function did not extend to key regulatory pathways, such as IL-12 production, which remained unaltered.