Scientists document an organ-specific innate immune
system
For the first time, scientists have documented an
organ-specific innate immune system. In research
published in the April 18 edition of the journal
Immunity, scientists at the University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine outline the unique
mechanism by which the lung shapes its defensive
strategies against microbial invasion.
"This innate immune response is specific to the lung,
and was probably designed to minimize collateral damage
to lung tissue caused by unchecked inflammation," said
Eyal Raz, M.D., Professor of Medicine at UCSD School of
Medicine.
The body's respiratory tract is constantly exposed to
inhaled particles or microorganisms. The alveola tiny
air sacs in the lung where exchanges of gases between
the respiratory and circulatory systems takes place are
protected from invading microbes by the alveolar
macrophage.
Macrophages are white blood cells involved in the
inflammatory response throughout the body, cells
normally on the alert for invaders to kill. Alveolar
macrophages are unique among macrophages in the body,
because their activation is inhibited by TGFb, a
compound expressed in the lung by epithelial cells.
"Because the microenvironment of the alveola is a
delicate one, it would be damaged if the macrophage
immune system was in a constant battle-ready status,"
said Raz. "This could readily lead to the type of
inflammation we see in autoimmune diseases of the lung
such as asthma."
Therefore, the alveola possess a complex immune system
in which the macrophage is repressed in its steady
state, activated when called upon to fight invading
microorganisms, and then re-repressed, in a circuit that
is unique to this microenvironment.
"Dissecting this immune mechanism provides us with the
knowledge of how we might prolong the activation status
of alveolar macrophages. This knowledge could prove to
be essential in combating any novel microbial agents
that could infect the lower airways, such as a new flu
strain or bioterrorist agents," said Raz.
The researchers' data outlines a complex circuit in
which the alveolar macrophages circumvent the inhibition
by TGFb for brief period of time, in order perform their
immune task. This is accomplished through regulation of
TGFb activity by a set of cell surface receptors,
proteins called integrins.
This regulation allows the alveolar macrophages to take
on their "killer" function the ability of macrophages
to engulf invading microorganisms but only for a very
limited period of time. The mediating role of TGFb,
briefly inactivated by the integrin, is then restored by
one of the lung's own enzymes, the MMP9.
"Basically, the macrophages wake up for a while, but the
system's own enzymes activate the inhibitor that puts
them back to sleep," said Kenji Takabayshi, Ph.D., first
author of the study.
Other contributors to this paper include Maripat Corr,
Tomoko Hayashi, Vanessa Redecke, Lucinda Beck, and
Donald Guiney of the Department of Medicine at UCSD
School of Medicine; and Dean Sheppard, Lung Biology
Center, University of California, San Francisco.