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Human monocytes and macrophages differ in their mechanisms of adaptation to hypoxia

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that during differentiation of monocytes into macrophages, crucial cellular adaptation mechanisms are decisively changed, apparently as an adaptation to a low oxygen environment.
Abstract
Inflammatory arthritis is a progressive disease with chronic inflammation of joints, which is mainly characterized by the infiltration of immune cells and synovial hyperproliferation. Monocytes migrate towards inflamed areas and differentiate into macrophages. In inflamed tissues, much lower oxygen levels (hypoxia) are present in comparison to the peripheral blood. Hence, a metabolic adaptation process must take place. Other studies suggest that Hypoxia Inducible Factor 1-alpha (HIF-1α) may regulate this process, but the mechanism involved for human monocytes is not yet clear. To address this issue, we analyzed the expression and function of HIF-1α in monocytes and macrophages, but also considered alternative pathways involving nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells (NFκB). Isolated human CD14+ monocytes were incubated under normoxia and hypoxia conditions with or without phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) stimulation, respectively. Nuclear and cytosolic fractions were prepared in order to detect HIF-1α and NFκB by immunoblot. For the experiments with macrophages, primary human monocytes were differentiated into human monocyte derived macrophages (hMDM) using human macrophage colony-stimulating factor (hM-CSF). The effects of normoxia and hypoxia on gene expression were compared between monocytes and hMDMs using quantitative PCR (quantitative polymerase chain reaction). We demonstrate, using primary human monocytes and hMDM, that the localization of transcription factor HIF-1α during the differentiation process is shifted from the cytosol (in monocytes) into the nucleus (in macrophages), apparently as an adaptation to a low oxygen environment. For this localization change, protein kinase C alpha/beta 1 (PKC-α/β1 ) plays an important role. In monocytes, it is NFκB1, and not HIF-1α, which is of central importance for the expression of hypoxia-adjusted genes. These data demonstrate that during differentiation of monocytes into macrophages, crucial cellular adaptation mechanisms are decisively changed.

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Preferential Destruction of Interstitial Macrophages over Alveolar Macrophages as a Cause of Pulmonary Disease in Simian Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Rhesus Macaques.

TL;DR: The effects of SIV infection on AMs in BAL fluid and IMs in lung tissue of rhesus macaques indicates that SIV produces lung tissue damage through destruction of IMs, whereas the longer-lived AMs may serve as a virus reservoir to facilitate HIV persistence.
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Quantitative Proteomics Reveals a Role for Epigenetic Reprogramming During Human Monocyte Differentiation

TL;DR: The application of mass spectrometry and bioinformatics to identify changes in human monocytes during their differentiation into macrophages and dendritic cells shows that linker histone H1 proteins are significantly down-regulated during monocyte differentiation, and suggests specific regulation of inter- and intra-histone modifications must occur in concert with chromatin remodeling by linkerhistones.
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HIF-1α is a negative regulator of interferon regulatory factors: Implications for interferon production by hypoxic monocytes.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated aspects of human monocyte activation under hypoxic conditions and found that hypoxia-inducible factor-1α functions as a direct transcriptional repressor of IRF5 and IRF3.
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Differential hypoxic regulation of the microRNA-146a/CXCR4 pathway in normal and leukemic monocytic cells: impact on response to chemotherapy

TL;DR: Hypoxia-mediated regulation of microRNA-146a, which controls CXCR4 expression in monocytic cells, is lost in acute monocytics leukemia, thus contributing to maintaining CX CR4 overexpression and protecting the cells from anti-leukemic drugs in the hypoxic bone marrow microenvironment.
Book ChapterDOI

Mutually Supportive Mechanisms of Inflammation and Vascular Remodeling.

TL;DR: This review examines the mutually supportive relationship between angiogenesis and inflammation, and considers how these interactions might be exploited to promote resolution of chronic inflammatory or angiogenic disorders.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

General involvement of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 in transcriptional response to hypoxia.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Hif-1 DNA binding activity is also induced by hypoxia in a variety of mammalian cell lines in which the EPO gene is not transcribed, providing evidence that HIF-1 and its recognition sequence are common components of a general mammalian cellular response to Hypoxia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 and regulation of DNA binding activity by hypoxia.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that induction of both Hif-1 and erythropoietin RNA is inhibited by the protein kinase inhibitor 2-aminopurine, consistent with the proposed function of HIF-1 as a physiologic regulator of gene expression that responds to changes in cellular oxygen tension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 by hypoxia.

TL;DR: It is described that oxygen availability is a determinant parameter in the setting of chemotactic responsiveness to stromal-derived factor 1 (CXCL12), and the Hyp–Hyp-inducible factor 1 α–CXCR4 pathway may regulate trafficking in and out of hypoxic tissue microenvironments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypoxia Induces Cyclooxygenase-2 via the NF-κB p65 Transcription Factor in Human Vascular Endothelial Cells

TL;DR: The intracellular signaling mechanism that leads to induction of COx-2 by hypoxia includes binding of p65 to the relatively 3′ NF-κB consensus element in the COX-2 upstream promoter region in human vascular endothelial cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Induction of endothelial PAS domain protein-1 by hypoxia: characterization and comparison with hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha.

TL;DR: Functional studies in a mutant cell line expressing neither HIF-1alpha nor EPAS-1 confirmed that both proteins interact with hypoxically responsive targets, but suggest target specificity with greater EPas-1 transactivation of the VEGF promoter than the LDH-A promoter.
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