Author:
Vellingiri Vigneshwaran,Balaji Ragunathrao Vijay Avin,Joshi Jagdish Chandra,Akhter Md Zahid,Anwar Mumtaz,Banerjee Somenath,Dudek Steven,Tsukasaki Yoshikazu,Pinho Sandra,Mehta Dolly
Abstract
AbstractNeutrophils (PMNs) reside as a marginated pool within the vasculature, ready for deployment during infection. However, how endothelial cells (ECs) control PMN extravasation and activation to strengthen tissue homeostasis remains ill-defined. Here, we found that the vascular ETS-related gene (ERG) is a generalized mechanism regulating PMN activity in preclinical tissue injury models and human patients. We show that ERG loss in ECs rewired PMN-transcriptome, enriched for genes associated with the CXCR2-CXCR4 signaling. Rewired PMNs compromise mice survival after pneumonia and induced lung vascular inflammatory injury following adoptive transfer into naïve mice, indicating their longevity and inflammatory activity memory. Mechanistically, EC-ERG restricted PMN extravasation and activation by upregulating the deubiquitinase A20 and downregulating the NFκB-IL8 cascade. Rescuing A20 inEC-Erg-/-endothelium or suppressing PMN-CXCR2 signaling rescued EC control of PMN activation. Findings deepen our understanding of EC control of PMN-mediated inflammation, offering potential avenues for targeting various inflammatory diseases.HighlightsERG regulates trans-endothelial neutrophil (PMN) extravasation, retention, and activationLoss of endothelial (EC) ERG rewires PMN-transcriptomeAdopted transfer of rewired PMNs causes inflammation in a naïve mouseERG transcribesA20and suppresses CXCR2 function to inactivate PMNsIn brief/blurbThe authors investigated how vascular endothelial cells (EC) control polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) extravasation, retention, and activation to strengthen tissue homeostasis. They showed that EC-ERG controls PMN transcriptome into an anti-adhesive and anti-inflammatory lineage by synthesizingA20and suppressing PMNs-CXCR2 signaling, defining EC-ERG as a target for preventing neutrophilic inflammatory injury.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory