作者
Ioannis Kourtzelis,Xiaofei Li,Ioannis Mitroulis,Daniel Grosser,Tetsuhiro Kajikawa,Baomei Wang,Michał Grzybek,Janusz von Renesse,Aleksander Czogalla,Maria Troullinaki,Anaísa V. Ferreira,Christian Doreth,Klara Ruppova,Lan‐Sun Chen,Kavita B. Hosur,Jong‐Hyung Lim,Kyoung‐Jin Chung,Sylvia Großklaus,A.-K. Tausche,Leo A. B. Joosten,Niki M. Moutsopoulos,Ben Wielockx,Antonio Castrillo,Jonathan Korostoff,Ünal Coskun,George Hajishengallis,Triantafyllos Chavakis
摘要
Resolution of inflammation is essential for tissue homeostasis and represents a promising approach to inflammatory disorders. Here we found that developmental endothelial locus-1 (DEL-1), a secreted protein that inhibits leukocyte–endothelial adhesion and inflammation initiation, also functions as a non-redundant downstream effector in inflammation clearance. In human and mouse periodontitis, waning of inflammation was correlated with DEL-1 upregulation, whereas resolution of experimental periodontitis failed in DEL-1 deficiency. This concept was mechanistically substantiated in acute monosodium-urate-crystal-induced inflammation, where the pro-resolution function of DEL-1 was attributed to effective apoptotic neutrophil clearance (efferocytosis). DEL-1-mediated efferocytosis induced liver X receptor–dependent macrophage reprogramming to a pro-resolving phenotype and was required for optimal production of at least certain specific pro-resolving mediators. Experiments in transgenic mice with cell-specific overexpression of DEL-1 linked its anti-leukocyte-recruitment action to endothelial cell–derived DEL-1 and its efferocytic/pro-resolving action to macrophage-derived DEL-1. Thus, the compartmentalized expression of DEL-1 facilitates distinct homeostatic functions in an appropriate context that can be harnessed therapeutically. DEL-1 protein interferes with leukocyte adhesion to prevent inflammation. Chavakis and colleagues now show that DEL-1 contributes to tissue resolution after inflammation by promoting macrophage-mediated efferocytosis and M2-like pro-resolving activities.