Neutrophil Macrophage Crosstalk via Extracellular Vesicles Drives Reverse Migration in a Fully Human Model of Wound Healing.

中性粒细胞与巨噬细胞通过细胞外囊泡进行相互作用,驱动全人类伤口愈合模型中的逆向迁移

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作者:Babatunde Kehinde Adebayo, Babatunde Oluwadamilola Fatimat, Ahmed Adeel, Salgado-Pabon Wilmara, Beebe David J, Kerr Sheena C
Persistent neutrophilic inflammation can lead to tissue damage and chronic inflammation, contributing to non-healing wounds. The resolution phase of neutrophilic inflammation is critical to preventing tissue damage. Animal models have provided insight into resolution of neutrophilic inflammation via efferocytosis and reverse migration (rM); however, species-specific differences and complexity of innate immune responses make translation to humans challenging. Thus, there is a need for in vitro systems that can elucidate mechanisms of resolution of human neutrophilic inflammation. Here, a human microphysiological system (MPS) is developed to mimic an inflammatory sterile injury (SI) microenvironment to study the role of macrophage-derived extracellular vesicles (M-EVs) in the resolution of inflammation via neutrophil rM. The MPS integrates a blood vessel mimic, injury site spheroid, human neutrophils, macrophages, and macrophage-derived EVs to investigate the role of M-EVs in neutrophil rM in vitro. The MPS enabled demonstration that EVs derived from macrophage subsets modulate migratory behavior in primary neutrophils differently in specific inflammatory microenvironments. A new mechanism is identified underlying neutrophil rM, where neutrophils exposed to M2-EV-derived-IL-8 migrate away from the SI site. Overall, the SI MPS system demonstrates a reverse migratory pattern in human primary neutrophils, advancing the study of the resolution of inflammation via M-EVs.

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