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      Flow cytometric analysis of the leukocyte landscape during bleomycin-induced lung injury and fibrosis in the rat.

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          Abstract

          Bleomycin-induced lung injury and fibrosis is a well-described model to investigate lung inflammatory and remodeling mechanisms. Rat models are clinically relevant and are also widely used, but rat bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells are not fully characterized with flow cytometry due to the limited availability of antibodies for this species. We optimized a comprehensive time-dependent flow cytometric analysis of cells after bleomycin challenge, confirming previous studies in other species and correlating them to histological staining, cytokine profiling, and collagen accumulation analysis in rat lungs. For this purpose, we describe a novel panel of rat surface markers and a strategy to identify and follow BAL cells over time. By combining surface markers in rat alveolar cells (CD45+), granulocytes and other myeloid cells, monocytes and macrophages can be identified by the expression of CD11b/c. Moreover, different activation states of macrophages (CD163+) can be observed: steady state (CD86-MHC-IIlow), activation during inflammation (CD86+,MHC-IIhigh), activation during remodeling (CD86+MHC-IIlow), and a population of newly recruited monocytes (CD163-α-granulocyte-). Hydroxyproline measured as marker of collagen content in lung tissue showed positive correlation with the reparative phase (CD163- cells and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP) and IL-10 increase). In conclusion, after a very early granulocytic recruitment, inflammation in rat lungs is observed by activated macrophages, and high release of IL-6 and fibrotic remodeling is characterized by recovery of the macrophage population together with TIMP, IL-10, and IL-18 production. Recruited monocytes and a second peak of granulocytes appear in the transitioning phase, correlating with immunostaining of arginase-1 in the tissue, revealing the importance of events leading the changes from injury to aberrant repair.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol
          American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology
          American Physiological Society
          1522-1504
          1040-0605
          July 01 2019
          : 317
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Institute of Functional and Applied Anatomy, Hannover Medical School , Hannover , Germany.
          [2 ] Biomedical Research in Endstage and Obstructive Lung Disease Hannover (BREATH), Member of the German Centre for Lung Research (DZL) , Hannover , Germany.
          [3 ] Cluster of excellence REBIRTH (From Regenerative Biology to Reconstructive Therapy), Hannover , Germany.
          [4 ] Institute of Experimental Haematology, Hannover Medical School , Hannover , Germany.
          [5 ] Institute of Vegetative Anatomy, Charité - Universitaetsmedizin Berlin, Berlin , Germany.
          Article
          10.1152/ajplung.00176.2018
          31042078
          e8ea83c8-ff09-4baa-ad68-a4939c261672
          History

          flow cytometry analysis,lung fibrosis in rats,macrophage activation,rat bronchoalveolar lavage

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