Altering in vivo fate of heart-infiltrating progenitors from pro-fibrotic into F4/80+macrophages prevents progression of myocarditis into inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_189D7C98F243
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Abstract (Abstract): shot summary in a article that contain essentials elements presented during a scientific conference, lecture or from a poster.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Altering in vivo fate of heart-infiltrating progenitors from pro-fibrotic into F4/80+macrophages prevents progression of myocarditis into inflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy
Title of the conference
Congress of the European-Society-of-Cardiology (ESC)
Author(s)
Kania G., Blyszczuk P., Berthonneche C., Behnke S., Glonkler M., Moch H., Pedrazzini T., Luscher T. F., Eriksson U.
Address
Aug 25-29, 2012; Munchen, Germany
ISBN
0195-668X
ISSN-L
0195-668X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2012
Volume
33
Series
European Heart Journal
Pages
328-329
Language
english
Abstract
Rationale: Experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM) mirrors important pathogenic aspects of inflammatory cardiomyopathy, a common cause of heart failure. In EAM, TGF-β-dependent conversion of heart-infiltrating prominin-1+ progenitors into myofibroblasts is critical for development of fibrosis and the end-stage heart failure phenotype. Therapeutic strategies modulating the in vivo fate of prominin-1+ progenitors might therefore prevent TGF-β-mediated cardiac fibrosis and pathological remodelling.
Methods and Results: EAM was induced in BALB/c mice using alpha-myosin heavy chain (aMyHC) peptide/complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) immunization. Prominin-1+ cells were isolated from the inflamed hearts at day 21 after immunization, expanded and treated with Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (M-CSF) or Transforming Growth Factor-beta (TGF-β). Herein, we demonstrated that M-CSF turns, ex vivo and in the EAM, heart-infiltrating prominin-1+ progenitors into immunosuppressive F4/80/CD11b/CD16/32/NOS2-expressing, nitric oxide producing and E.coli bacteria phygocyting macrophages, and protect further TGF-β-stimulated differentiation into pathogenic myofibroblasts. Systemic M-CSF treatment during myocarditis completely prevented post-inflammatory fibrosis, T cell relapse and left ventricular dysfunction. Mechanistically, M-CSF-induced macrophage differentiation from prominin-1+ progenitors critically required nitric oxide synthase 2. Accordingly, M-CSF treatment failed to reduce myocardial fibrosis development in Nos2-/- mice.
Conclusions: Altering the in vivo fate of inflammatory prominin-1 expressing progenitors from pro-fibrotic into the F4/80 expressing macrophage phenotype protects from myocarditis progression, cardiac fibrosis, and heart failure. These findings offer a modern therapeutic model and challenge former concepts, which attributed macrophages a detrimental role in inflammatory cardiomyopathy progression.
Web of science
Create date
17/12/2012 11:04
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:49
Usage data