Graduate Program in Immunology, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI.
Graduate Program in Immunology, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI; Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI; Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan Health System; and the Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Section, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI.
Chest. 2013 Jun;143(6):1750-1757. doi: 10.1378/chest.12-2413.
In healthy individuals, billions of cells die by apoptosis each day. Clearance of these apoptotic cells, termed "efferocytosis," must be efficient to prevent secondary necrosis and the release of proinflammatory cell contents that disrupt tissue homeostasis and potentially foster autoimmunity. During inflammation, most apoptotic cells are cleared by macrophages; the efferocytic process actively induces a macrophage phenotype that favors tissue repair and suppression of inflammation. Several chronic lung diseases, particularly airways diseases such as chronic obstructive lung disease, asthma, and cystic fibrosis, are characterized by an increased lung burden of uningested apoptotic cells. Alveolar macrophages from individuals with these chronic airways diseases have decreased efferocytosis relative to alveolar macrophages from healthy subjects. These two findings have led to the hypothesis that impaired apoptotic cell clearance may contribute causally to sustained lung inflammation and that therapies to enhance efferocytosis might be beneficial. This review of the English-language scientific literature (2006 to mid-2012) explains how such existing therapies as corticosteroids, statins, and macrolides may act in part by augmenting apoptotic cell clearance. However, efferocytosis can also impede host defenses against lung infection. Thus, determining whether novel therapies to augment efferocytosis should be developed and in whom they should be used lies at the heart of efforts to differentiate specific phenotypes within complex chronic lung diseases to provide appropriately personalized therapies.
在健康个体中,每天都有数十亿细胞通过细胞凋亡而死亡。这些凋亡细胞的清除,称为“噬细胞作用”,必须有效,以防止继发性坏死和促炎细胞内容物的释放,从而破坏组织内稳态并可能促进自身免疫。在炎症过程中,大多数凋亡细胞被巨噬细胞清除;噬细胞作用会主动诱导巨噬细胞表型,有利于组织修复和抑制炎症。几种慢性肺部疾病,特别是气道疾病,如慢性阻塞性肺病、哮喘和囊性纤维化,其特点是未被吞噬的凋亡细胞在肺部的负担增加。与来自健康受试者的肺泡巨噬细胞相比,来自患有这些慢性气道疾病的个体的肺泡巨噬细胞的噬细胞作用降低。这两个发现导致了这样的假说,即凋亡细胞清除受损可能是导致持续肺部炎症的原因,并且增强噬细胞作用的治疗可能是有益的。对英语科学文献(2006 年至 2012 年年中)的综述解释了现有的一些治疗方法,如皮质类固醇、他汀类药物和大环内酯类药物,如何通过增强凋亡细胞清除作用而发挥部分作用。然而,噬细胞作用也可能阻碍宿主对肺部感染的防御。因此,确定是否应该开发增强噬细胞作用的新疗法,以及应该在哪些人群中使用这些疗法,是区分复杂慢性肺部疾病中特定表型以提供适当个性化治疗的核心努力。