Title | The synthetic phospholipid C8-C1P determines pro-angiogenic and pro-reparative features in human macrophages restraining the proinflammatory M1-like phenotype. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2023 |
Authors | Wilczyñski JManuel Ort, Mena HAgustina, Ledesma MManuel, Olexen CMariel, Podaza E, Schattner M, Negrotto S, Errasti AEmilse, Silva EAntonio Ca |
Journal | Front Immunol |
Volume | 14 |
Pagination | 1162671 |
Date Published | 2023 |
ISSN | 1664-3224 |
Keywords | Apoptosis, Humans, Inflammation, Macrophages, Monocytes, Phenotype |
Abstract | Monocytes (Mo) are highly plastic myeloid cells that differentiate into macrophages after extravasation, playing a pivotal role in the resolution of inflammation and regeneration of injured tissues. Wound-infiltrated monocytes/macrophages are more pro-inflammatory at early time points, while showing anti-inflammatory/pro-reparative phenotypes at later phases, with highly dynamic switching depending on the wound environment. Chronic wounds are often arrested in the inflammatory phase with hampered inflammatory/repair phenotype transition. Promoting the tissue repair program switching represents a promising strategy to revert chronic inflammatory wounds, one of the major public health loads. We found that the synthetic lipid C8-C1P primes human CD14+ monocytes, restraining the inflammatory activation markers (HLA-DR, CD44, and CD80) and IL-6 when challenged with LPS, and preventing apoptosis by inducing BCL-2. We also observed increased pseudo-tubule formation of human endothelial-colony-forming cells (ECFCs) when stimulated with the C1P-macrophages secretome. Moreover, C8-C1P-primed monocytes skew differentiation toward pro-resolutive-like macrophages, even in the presence of inflammatory PAMPs and DAMPs by increasing anti-inflammatory and pro-angiogenic gene expression patterns. All these results indicate that C8-C1P could restrain M1 skewing and promote the program of tissue repair and pro-angiogenic macrophage. |
DOI | 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1162671 |
Alternate Journal | Front Immunol |
PubMed ID | 37398671 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC10311553 |