Elsevier

Journal of Hepatology

Volume 73, Issue 2, August 2020, Pages 349-360
Journal of Hepatology

Research Article
Alternatively activated macrophages promote resolution of necrosis following acute liver injury

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2020.02.031Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Primary BMDMs localised to liver and spleen within hours following intravenous injection in mice.

  • AAMs were highly phagocytic and i.v. transfer elicited reductions in necrotic area, HMGB1 translocation, and hepatic neutrophil infiltration.

  • AAM injection reduced inflammatory mediators and stimulated hepatocyte/endothelium proliferation in injured liver.

  • Injection of clinical-grade human AAMs could partially recapitulate the efficacy of murine AAMs in immunocompetent mice.

Background & Aim

Following acetaminophen (APAP) overdose, acute liver injury (ALI) can occur in patients that present too late for N-acetylcysteine treatment, potentially leading to acute liver failure, systemic inflammation, and death. Macrophages influence the progression and resolution of ALI due to their innate immunological function and paracrine activity. Syngeneic primary bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMDMs) were tested as a cell-based therapy in a mouse model of APAP-induced ALI (APAP-ALI).

Methods

Several phenotypically distinct BMDM populations were delivered intravenously to APAP-ALI mice when hepatic necrosis was established, and then evaluated based on their effects on injury, inflammation, immunity, and regeneration. In vivo phagocytosis assays were used to interrogate the phenotype and function of alternatively activated BMDMs (AAMs) post-injection. Finally, primary human AAMs sourced from healthy volunteers were evaluated in immunocompetent APAP-ALI mice.

Results

BMDMs rapidly localised to the liver and spleen within 4 h of administration. Injection of AAMs specifically reduced hepatocellular necrosis, HMGB1 translocation, and infiltrating neutrophils following APAP-ALI. AAM delivery also stimulated proliferation in hepatocytes and endothelium, and reduced levels of several circulating proinflammatory cytokines within 24 h. AAMs displayed a high phagocytic activity both in vitro and in injured liver tissue post-injection. Crosstalk with the host innate immune system was demonstrated by reduced infiltrating host Ly6Chi macrophages in AAM-treated mice. Importantly, therapeutic efficacy was partially recapitulated using clinical-grade primary human AAMs in immunocompetent APAP-ALI mice, underscoring the translational potential of these findings.

Conclusion

We identify that AAMs have value as a cell-based therapy in an experimental model of APAP-ALI. Human AAMs warrant further evaluation as a potential cell-based therapy for APAP overdose patients with established liver injury.

Lay summary

After an overdose of acetaminophen (paracetamol), some patients present to hospital too late for the current antidote (N-acetylcysteine) to be effective. We tested whether macrophages, an injury-responsive leukocyte that can scavenge dead/dying cells, could serve as a cell-based therapy in an experimental model of acetaminophen overdose. Injection of alternatively activated macrophages rapidly reduced liver injury and reduced several mediators of inflammation. Macrophages show promise to serve as a potential cell-based therapy for acute liver injury.

Keywords

Acetaminophen
Liver regeneration
Macrophages
Necrosis
Phagocytosis

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Author names in bold designate shared co-first authorship