Receptor Biology Laboratory, Toxicology and Molecular Biology Branch, Health Effects Laboratory Division, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Morgantown, WV, United States.
Front Immunol. 2020 Jun 17;11:1060. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01060. eCollection 2020.
Polarization of immune cells is commonly observed in host responses associated with microbial immunity, inflammation, tumorigenesis, and tissue repair and fibrosis. In this process, immune cells adopt distinct programs and perform specialized functions in response to specific signals. Accumulating evidence indicates that inhalation of micro- and nano-sized particulates activates barrier immune programs in the lung in a time- and context-dependent manner, including type 1 and type 2 inflammation, and T helper (Th) 17 cell, regulatory T cell (Treg), innate lymphoid cell (ILC), and myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC) responses, which highlight the polarization of several major immune cell types. These responses facilitate the pulmonary clearance and repair under physiological conditions. When exposure persists and overwhelms the clearance capacity, they foster the chronic progression of inflammation and development of progressive disease conditions, such as fibrosis and cancer. The pulmonary response to insoluble particulates thus represents a distinctive disease process wherein non-infectious, persistent exposures stimulate the polarization of immune cells to orchestrate dynamic inflammatory and immune reactions, leading to pulmonary and pleural chronic inflammation, fibrosis, and malignancy. Despite large variations in particles and their associated disease outcomes, the early response to inhaled particles often follows a common path. The initial reactions entail a barrier immune response dominated by type 1 inflammation that features active phagocytosis by M1 macrophages and recruitment of neutrophils, both of which are fueled by Th1 and proinflammatory cytokines. Acute inflammation is immediately followed by resolution and tissue repair mediated through specialized pro-resolving mediators (SPMs) and type 2 cytokines and cells including M2 macrophages and Th2 lymphocytes. As many particles and fibers cannot be digested by phagocytes, resolution is often extended and incomplete, and type 2 inflammation becomes heightened, which promotes interstitial fibrosis, granuloma formation, and tumorigenesis. Recent studies also reveal the involvement of Th17-, Treg-, ILC-, and MDSC-mediated responses in the pathogenesis caused by inhaled particulates. This review synopsizes the progress in understanding the interplay between inhaled particles and the pulmonary immune functions in disease pathogenesis, with focus on particle-induced polarization of immune cells and its role in the development of chronic inflammation, fibrosis, and cancer in the lung.
免疫细胞的极化在与微生物免疫、炎症、肿瘤发生以及组织修复和纤维化相关的宿主反应中很常见。在这个过程中,免疫细胞根据特定信号采用不同的程序并执行特定功能。越来越多的证据表明,微纳米颗粒的吸入以时间和上下文依赖的方式激活肺部的屏障免疫程序,包括 1 型和 2 型炎症以及辅助性 T 细胞(Th)17 细胞、调节性 T 细胞(Treg)、先天淋巴样细胞(ILC)和髓系来源的抑制性细胞(MDSC)反应,突出了几种主要免疫细胞类型的极化。这些反应促进了生理条件下肺部的清除和修复。当暴露持续存在并超过清除能力时,它们促进炎症的慢性进展和进行性疾病状况的发展,如纤维化和癌症。因此,不可溶性颗粒对肺部的反应代表了一种独特的疾病过程,其中非传染性、持续暴露刺激免疫细胞的极化以协调动态炎症和免疫反应,导致肺部和胸膜慢性炎症、纤维化和恶性肿瘤。尽管颗粒及其相关疾病结果存在很大差异,但吸入颗粒的早期反应通常遵循共同的途径。最初的反应涉及由 1 型炎症主导的屏障免疫反应,其特征是 M1 巨噬细胞的主动吞噬作用和中性粒细胞的募集,这两者都由 Th1 和促炎细胞因子驱动。急性炎症立即被通过专门的促解决介质(SPM)和 2 型细胞因子和细胞(包括 M2 巨噬细胞和 Th2 淋巴细胞)介导的解决和组织修复所取代。由于许多颗粒和纤维不能被吞噬细胞消化,因此解决通常会延长且不完整,2 型炎症加剧,从而促进间质纤维化、肉芽肿形成和肿瘤发生。最近的研究还揭示了 Th17、Treg、ILC 和 MDSC 介导的反应在吸入颗粒引起的发病机制中的参与。本综述综合了对吸入颗粒与肺部免疫功能在疾病发病机制中的相互作用的理解进展,重点介绍了颗粒诱导的免疫细胞极化及其在肺部慢性炎症、纤维化和癌症发展中的作用。