Macrophage Cx43 Is Necessary for Fibroblast Cytosolic Calcium and Lung Fibrosis After Injury

Abstract

Macrophages are paracrine signalers that regulate tissular responses to injury through interactions with parenchymal cells. Connexin hemichannels have recently been shown to mediate efflux of ATP by macrophages, with resulting cytosolic calcium responses in adjacent cells. Here we report that lung macrophages with deletion of connexin 43 (MacΔCx43) had decreased ATP efflux into the extracellular space and induced a decreased cytosolic calcium response in co-cultured fibroblasts compared to WT macrophages. Furthermore, MacΔCx43 mice had decreased lung fibrosis after bleomycin-induced injury. Interrogating single cell data for human and mouse, we found that P2rx4 was the most highly expressed ATP receptor and calcium channel in lung fibroblasts and that its expression was increased in the setting of fibrosis. Fibroblast-specific deletion of P2rx4 in mice decreased lung fibrosis and collagen expression in lung fibroblasts in the bleomycin model. Taken together, these studies reveal a Cx43-dependent profibrotic effect of lung macrophages and support development of fibroblast P2rx4 as a therapeutic target for lung fibrosis.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
May 12, 2022
Source ID
10.3389/fimmu.2022.880887

Entities

People

  • Aritra Bhattacharyya
  • Christopher D. C. Allen
  • Dean Sheppard
  • James B. Jung
  • Kaveh Boostanpour
  • Mallar Bhattacharya
  • Paola Torre
  • Preeti Yadav
  • Rieko Muramatsu
  • Robert I. Seed
  • Stephen L. Nishimura
  • Tatsuya Tsukui
  • Tian Y. Chen
  • Xin-zi Tang

Organizations

  • Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs
  • National Institutes of Health

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Cellular and Molecular Pathways of Apoptosis.
  • Immunology and Pathology

Technology Areas

  • Space