Fibroblasts Promote Inflammation and Pain via IL-1α Induction of the Monocyte Chemoattractant Chemokine (C-C Motif) Ligand 2

成纤维细胞通过 IL-1α 诱导单核细胞趋化因子 (CC 基序) 配体 2 促进炎症和疼痛

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作者:Hannah L Paish, Nicholas S Kalson, Graham R Smith, Alicia Del Carpio Pons, Thomas E Baldock, Nicholas Smith, Katarzyna Swist-Szulik, David J Weir, Michelle Bardgett, David J Deehan, Derek A Mann, Lee A Borthwick

Abstract

Fibroblasts persist within fibrotic scar tissue and exhibit considerable phenotypic and functional plasticity. Herein, we hypothesized that scar-associated fibroblasts may be a source of stress-induced inflammatory exacerbations and pain. To test this idea, we used a human model of surgery-induced fibrosis, total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Using a combination of tissue protein expression profiling and bioinformatics, we discovered that many months after TKA, the fibrotic joint exists in a state of unresolved chronic inflammation. Moreover, the infrapatellar fat pad, a soft tissue that becomes highly fibrotic in the post-TKA joint, expresses multiple inflammatory mediators, including the monocyte chemoattractant, chemokine (C-C motif) ligand (CCL) 2, and the innate immune trigger, IL-1α. Fibroblasts isolated from the post-TKA fibrotic infrapatellar fat pad express the IL-1 receptor and on exposure to IL-1α polarize to a highly inflammatory state that enables them to stimulate the recruitment of monocytes. Blockade of fibroblast CCL2 or its transcriptional regulator NF-κB prevented IL-1α-induced monocyte recruitment. Clinical investigations discovered that levels of patient-reported pain in the post-TKA joint correlated with concentrations of CCL2 in the joint tissue, such that the chemokine is effectively a pain biomarker in the TKA patient. We propose that an IL-1α-NF-κB-CCL2 signaling pathway, operating within scar-associated fibroblasts, may be therapeutically manipulated for alleviating inflammation and pain in fibrotic joints and other tissues.

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