Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease of Zhejiang Province, Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou 310009, China; and.
Department of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Key Laboratory of Respiratory Disease of Zhejiang Province, Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou 310009, China; and
J Immunol. 2018 Apr 15;200(8):2826-2834. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.1701471. Epub 2018 Mar 21.
Increasing toxicological and epidemiological studies have demonstrated that ambient particulate matter (PM) could cause adverse health effects including inflammation in the lung. Alveolar macrophages represent a major type of innate immune responses to foreign substances. However, the detailed mechanisms of inflammatory responses induced by PM exposure in macrophages are still unclear. We observed that coarse PM treatment rapidly activated mechanistic target of rapamycin (MTOR) in mouse alveolar macrophages in vivo, and in cultured mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages, mouse peritoneal macrophages, and RAW264.7 cells. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic knockdown of MTOR in bone marrow-derived macrophages leads to an amplified cytokine production upon PM exposure, and mice with specific knockdown of MTOR or ras homolog enriched in brain in myeloid cells exhibit significantly aggregated airway inflammation. Mechanistically, PM activated MTOR through modulation of ERK, AKT serine/threonine kinase 1, and tuberous sclerosis complex signals, whereas MTOR deficiency further enhanced the PM-induced necroptosis and activation of subsequent NF κ light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NFKB) signaling. Inhibition of necroptosis or NFKB pathways significantly ameliorated PM-induced inflammatory response in MTOR-deficient macrophages. The present study thus demonstrates that MTOR serves as an early adaptive signal that suppresses the PM-induced necroptosis, NFKB activation, and inflammatory response in lung macrophages, and suggests that activation of MTOR or inhibition of necroptosis in macrophages may represent novel therapeutic strategies for PM-related airway disorders.
越来越多的毒理学和流行病学研究表明,环境颗粒物(PM)可能会对肺部造成不良健康影响,包括炎症。肺泡巨噬细胞是对异物产生固有免疫反应的主要类型之一。然而,PM 暴露引起巨噬细胞炎症反应的详细机制仍不清楚。我们观察到粗颗粒物(PM)处理能迅速激活体内小鼠肺泡巨噬细胞和培养的小鼠骨髓来源巨噬细胞、小鼠腹腔巨噬细胞和 RAW264.7 细胞中的雷帕霉素靶蛋白(mTOR)。在骨髓来源的巨噬细胞中,mTOR 的药理学抑制或基因敲低会导致 PM 暴露时细胞因子产生增加,骨髓细胞中特异性敲低 mTOR 或富含脑中 ras 同源物(Rheb)的小鼠表现出明显聚集的气道炎症。从机制上讲,PM 通过调节 ERK、AKT 丝氨酸/苏氨酸激酶 1 和结节性硬化复合物信号来激活 mTOR,而 mTOR 缺乏会进一步增强 PM 诱导的坏死和随后 NF-κB 信号的激活。抑制坏死或 NF-κB 途径可显著改善 mTOR 缺陷型巨噬细胞中的 PM 诱导的炎症反应。因此,本研究表明,mTOR 作为一种早期适应性信号,可抑制 PM 诱导的肺巨噬细胞坏死、NF-κB 激活和炎症反应,并提示巨噬细胞中 mTOR 的激活或坏死的抑制可能代表 PM 相关气道疾病的新治疗策略。