Neutrophil transfer of miR-223 to lung epithelial cells dampens acute lung injury in mice

V Neudecker, KS Brodsky, ET Clambey… - Science translational …, 2017 - science.org
V Neudecker, KS Brodsky, ET Clambey, EP Schmidt, TA Packard, B Davenport…
Science translational medicine, 2017science.org
Intercellular transfer of microRNAs can mediate communication between critical effector
cells. We hypothesized that transfer of neutrophil-derived microRNAs to pulmonary epithelial
cells could alter mucosal gene expression during acute lung injury. Pulmonary-epithelial
microRNA profiling during coculture of alveolar epithelial cells with polymorphonuclear
neutrophils (PMNs) revealed a selective increase in lung epithelial cell expression of
microRNA-223 (miR-223). Analysis of PMN-derived supernatants showed activation …
Intercellular transfer of microRNAs can mediate communication between critical effector cells. We hypothesized that transfer of neutrophil-derived microRNAs to pulmonary epithelial cells could alter mucosal gene expression during acute lung injury. Pulmonary-epithelial microRNA profiling during coculture of alveolar epithelial cells with polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) revealed a selective increase in lung epithelial cell expression of microRNA-223 (miR-223). Analysis of PMN-derived supernatants showed activation-dependent release of miR-223 and subsequent transfer to alveolar epithelial cells during coculture in vitro or after ventilator-induced acute lung injury in mice. Genetic studies indicated that miR-223 deficiency was associated with severe lung inflammation, whereas pulmonary overexpression of miR-223 in mice resulted in protection during acute lung injury induced by mechanical ventilation or by infection with Staphylococcus aureus. Studies of putative miR-223 gene targets implicated repression of poly(adenosine diphosphate–ribose) polymerase–1 (PARP-1) in the miR-223–dependent attenuation of lung inflammation. Together, these findings suggest that intercellular transfer of miR-223 from neutrophils to pulmonary epithelial cells may dampen acute lung injury through repression of PARP-1.
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