Compartir
Título
Autophagy modulates endothelial junctions to restrain neutrophil diapedesis during inflammation.
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
endothelium
junctions
neutrophils
inflammation
extravasation
autophagy
PECAM-1
ATG16L1
Clasificación UNESCO
2412 Inmunología
Fecha de publicación
2021-09-14
Citación
Reglero-Real, N., Pérez-Gutiérrez, L., Yoshimura, A., Rolas, L., Garrido-Mesa, J., Barkaway, A., ... & Nourshargh, S. (2021). Autophagy modulates endothelial junctions to restrain neutrophil diapedesis during inflammation. Immunity, 54(9), 1989-2004.
Resumen
[EN]The migration of neutrophils from the blood circulation to sites of infection or injury is a key immune response and requires the breaching of endothelial cells (ECs) that line the inner aspect of blood vessels. Unregulated neutrophil transendothelial cell migration (TEM) is pathogenic, but the molecular basis of its physiological termination remains unknown. Here, we demonstrated that ECs of venules in inflamed tissues exhibited a robust autophagic response that was aligned temporally with the peak of neutrophil trafficking and was strictly localized to EC contacts. Genetic ablation of EC autophagy led to excessive neutrophil TEM and uncontrolled leukocyte migration in murine inflammatory models, while pharmacological induction of autophagy suppressed neutrophil infiltration into tissues. Mechanistically, autophagy regulated the remodeling of EC junctions and expression of key EC adhesion molecules, facilitating their intracellular trafficking and degradation. Collectively, we have identified autophagy as a modulator of EC leukocyte trafficking machinery aimed at terminating physiological inflammation.
URI
ISSN
1074-7613
DOI
10.1016/j.immuni.2021.07.012
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- GFCYR. Artículos [16]
Arquivos deste item
Tamaño:
5.267Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF
Descripción:
Artículo autofagia y neutrófilos













