Immunity
Volume 42, Issue 4, 21 April 2015, Pages 640-653
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Article
Lipopolysaccharide Induces Alveolar Macrophage Necrosis via CD14 and the P2X7 Receptor Leading to Interleukin-1α Release

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2015.03.007Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Intratracheal LPS induces alveolar macrophage necrosis and pro-IL-1α release

  • Pro-IL-1α activates EC via IL-1/MyD88 signaling leading to loss of VE-cadherin

  • VE-cadherin loss facilitates neutrophil recruitment and vascular leakage

  • LPS induces AM necrosis via Ca2+ influx triggered by CD14/P2X7R signaling

Summary

Acute lung injury (ALI) remains a serious health issue with little improvement in our understanding of the pathophysiology and therapeutic approaches. We investigated the mechanism that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) induces early neutrophil recruitment to lungs and increases pulmonary vascular permeability during ALI. Intratracheal LPS induced release of pro-interleukin-1α (IL-1α) from necrotic alveolar macrophages (AM), which activated endothelial cells (EC) to induce vascular leakage via loss of vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin. LPS triggered the AM purinergic receptor P2X7(R) to induce Ca2+ influx and ATP depletion, which led to necrosis. P2X7R deficiency significantly reduced necrotic death of AM and release of pro-IL-1α into the lung. CD14 was required for LPS binding to P2X7R, as CD14 neutralization significantly diminished LPS induced necrotic death of AM and pro-IL-1α release. These results demonstrate a key role for pro-IL-1α from necrotic alveolar macrophages in LPS-mediated ALI, as a critical initiator of increased vascular permeability and early neutrophil infiltration.

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