Abstract

The absence of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) causes lethal infection by <i>Leishmania major</i> in normally resistant C57BL/6J (B6.WT) mice. The underlying pathogenic mechanism of this fatal disease has so far remained elusive. We found that B6.WT mice deficient for the <i>tnf</i> gene (B6.TNF<sup>-/-</sup>) displayed not only a non-healing cutaneous lesion but also a serious infection of the liver upon <i>L. major</i> inoculation. Infected B6.TNF<sup>-/-</sup> mice developed an enlarged liver that showed increased inflammation. Furthermore, we detected an accumulating monocyte-derived macrophage population (CD45<sup>+</sup>F4/80<sup>+</sup>CD11b<sup>hi</sup>Ly6C<sup>low</sup>) that displayed a M2 macrophage phenotype with high expression of CD206, arginase-1, and IL-6, supporting the notion that IL-6 could be involved in M2 differentiation. In <i>in vitro</i> experiments, we demonstrated that IL-6 upregulated M-CSF receptor expression and skewed monocyte differentiation from dendritic cells to macrophages. This was countered by the addition of TNF. Furthermore, TNF interfered with the activation of IL-6-induced gp130-signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) 3 and IL-4-STAT6 signaling, thereby abrogating IL-6-facilitated M2 macrophage polarization. Therefore, our results support the notion of a general role of TNF in the inflammatory activation of macrophages and define a new role of IL-6 signaling in macrophage polarization downstream of TNF.

Keywords

Tumor necrosis factor alphaMacrophage polarizationSTAT proteinM2 MacrophageMacrophageImmunologyBiologyCancer researchSTAT6MonocyteLeishmania majorCytokinePopulationCell biologySignal transductionMedicineInterleukin 4LeishmaniaIn vitroSTAT3

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Year
2018
Type
article
Volume
9
Pages
1-1
Citations
976
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Shanshan Hu, Cameron Marshall, Jocelyn M. Darby et al. (2018). Absence of Tumor Necrosis Factor Supports Alternative Activation of Macrophages in the Liver after Infection with Leishmania major. Frontiers in Immunology , 9 , 1-1. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.00001

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DOI
10.3389/fimmu.2018.00001