Recent studies have demonstrated an essential and nonredundant role for macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in asthma pathogenesis. Here we investigate the mechanisms involved in MIF-induced eosinophil activation. By using a model of allergic pulmonary inflammation, we observed that allergen challenge-elicited eosinophil influx, lipid body (also known as lipid droplets) biogenesis, and leukotriene (LT) C₄ synthesis are markedly reduced in Mif(-/-) compared with wild-type mice. Likewise, in vivo administration of MIF induced formation of new lipid bodies within eosinophils recruited to the inflammatory reaction site that corresponded to the intracellular compartment of increased LTC₄ synthesis. MIF-mediated eosinophil activation was at least in part due to a direct effect on eosinophils, because MIF was able to elicit lipid body assembly within human eosinophils in vitro, a phenomenon that was blocked by neutralization of the MIF receptor, CD74. MIF-induced eosinophil lipid body biogenesis, both in vivo and in vitro, was dependent on the cooperation of MIF and eotaxin acting in a positive-feedback loop, because anti-eotaxin and anti-CCR3 antibodies inhibit MIF-elicited lipid body formation, whereas eotaxin-induced lipid body formation is affected by anti-CD74 and MIF expression deficiency. Therefore, allergy-elicited inflammatory MIF acts in concert with eotaxin as a key activator of eosinophils to form LTC₄-synthesizing lipid bodies via cross-talk between CD74 and CCR3. Due to the effect of MIF on eosinophils, strategies that inhibit MIF activity might be of therapeutic value in controlling allergic inflammation.
1 We examined bone-marrow in mice receiving subcutaneous implants of heat-coagulated egg white, which are known to present chronic eosinophilic inflammation at the implant site. Egg white implants (EWIs) induced marked bone-marrow eosinophilia, and increased bone-marrow cell responses to granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-5 in culture. These effects were observed as early as 24 h and lasted for, at least, 30 days in implant recipients. 2 We found, however, that increased eosinophil production was also observed in control mice which underwent surgery but received no EWI (sham-implanted mice), up to 15 days post-surgery. As this suggests an important contribution of nonspecific stress mechanisms to eosinopoiesis, we further evaluated the role of stress hormones produced by the adrenal glands in the bone-marrow eosinophilia of sham-implanted mice. 3 Bone-marrow eosinophilia in mice undergoing surgery was dissociated from increases in other haemopoietic lineages. Surgery by itself increased circulating corticosterone levels by 24 h, and the increase was prevented by inhibition of adrenal glucocorticoid production by metyrapone. The effect of surgery on bone-marrow eosinophilia was prevented by pretreatment with both the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, mifepristone, and metyrapone, and by surgical adrenalectomy. 4 By contrast, cathecolamine receptor antagonists (propranolol, prazosin and yohimbine) were ineffective, indicating that cathecolamine release from the adrenal glands was not responsible for the effects on bone-marrow. 5 These results highlight a critical role for stress-induced glucocorticoid hormones in selectively upregulating bone-marrow eosinopoiesis in mice submitted to surgery.
Deposition of immune complexes (IC) triggers Fc gamma R-dependent inflammation, leading to tissue damage in rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematous, immune glomerulonephritis, and several immune vasculitides. Evidences support a role for macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) in a number of inflammatory diseases, but the triggering of its secretion and its physiopathological role upon IC deposition remain elusive. Herein, we show that human macrophages secreted MIF after IC recognition, which in turn controlled the secretion of TNF. Macrophages from Mif-/- mice produced smaller amounts of TNF when stimulated with IgG-opsonized erythrocytes than wild-type (WT) cells. Using passive reverse Arthus reaction in the peritoneum and lungs as a model for IC-induced inflammation, we demonstrated that Mif-/- mice had a milder response, observed by reduced neutrophil recruitment, vascular leakage, and secretion of TNF, MIP-2, and keratinocyte-derived chemokine compared with WT controls. Adoptive transfer of alveolar macrophages from WT to Mif-/- mice rescued pulmonary neutrophil recruitment and TNF production upon passive reverse Arthus reaction. Our study indicates that Arthus inflammatory reaction is largely dependent on MIF and poses macrophages as a source of the MIF released upon IC recognition. These results give experimental support to the proposition that blockade of MIF might constitute an adjunctive, therapeutic approach to IC disease.
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