Targeting the macrophage in equine post-operative ileus
Item Status
Embargo End Date
Date
Authors
Lisowski, Zofia Maria
Abstract
Post-operative ileus (POI) is the functional inhibition of propulsive intestinal motility
which is a frequent occurrence following abdominal surgery in the horse and in
humans. Rodent and human-derived data have shown that manipulation-induced
activation of the resident muscularis externa (ME) macrophages in the intestine
contributes to the pathophysiology of the disease. Most studies of the disease,
specifically in the horse, have focussed on identification of risk factors, descriptive
studies of the disease or the assessment of the efficacy of various therapeutic and
prophylactic interventions. As a result, the proposed pathogenesis of equine POI is
largely reliant on the translation of data from rodent models. The aims of this thesis
were to identify macrophage populations in the normal equine gastrointestinal tract
(GIT) and to study equine macrophage activation by stimulating equine bone marrow-derived
macrophages (eqBMDMs) with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a model for
intestinal macrophage activation.
Firstly, the normal population of macrophages in the equine GIT was determined.
Using CD163 as an immunohistochemical marker for macrophages. CD163+ve cells
were present in all tissue layers of the equine intestine: mucosa, submucosa, ME and
serosa. CD163+ve cells were regularly distributed within the ME, with accumulations
adjacent to the myenteric plexus, and therefore to intestinal motility effector cells
such as neurons and the Interstitial Cells of Cajal.
The differentiation and survival of intestinal macrophages depends upon signals
from the macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF-1) receptor. LPS translocation
from the gut lumen is thought to be a key activator of ME macrophages. To provide
a model for gut macrophages, a protocol was optimised to produce pure populations
of equine bone marrow-derived macrophages (eqBMDMs) by cultivation of equine
bone marrow in CSF-1. Macrophage functionality was assessed using microscopy,
flow cytometry and phagocytosis assays. EqBMDMs responded to LPS stimulation
with increases in expression of positive control genes, tumour necrosis factor alpha
(TNF-α) and Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO1). The same mRNA was subjected to
transcriptomic (RNA-Seq) analysis. Differential gene expression and network cluster
analysis demonstrated an inflammatory response characterised by the production of
pro-inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin 1 beta (IL-1β) and interleukin 6 (IL-6).
However, in contrast to rodent macrophages, eqBMDMs failed to produce nitric oxide
in response to LPS, showing species-specific variation in innate immune biology.
Using these data, we compared gene expression in normal equine intestine and in
intestine from horses undergoing abdominal surgery for colic (abdominal pain).
Horses undergoing abdominal surgery showed evidence of increased expression of
IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α in the mucosa and ME when compared to control tissue. Horses
with post-operative reflux (POR), a clinical sign of POI, had increased gene expression
of IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α compared to horses that did not develop POR following
abdominal surgery. These preliminary data suggest that there is macrophage
activation within the ME of the intestine during abdominal surgery in the horse, and
that a greater activation state is present in horses that subsequently develop POR.
The final part of this study was to investigate the effect of a long-acting form of CSF-
1, an Fc fusion protein (CSF1-Fc), as a potential treatment for POI using a mouse
model. This work, performed in collaboration with another research group, found
that mice lacking the C-C chemokine receptor type 2 (CCR2) gene, which is required
for monocyte recruitment into tissues, had a longer recovery period following
intestinal manipulation (IM) than wild type (WT) mice. With the administration of
CSF1-Fc, infiltration of neutrophils to the ME was reduced and the number of
macrophages in the ME was increased in both WT and CCR2-/- mice following IM.
Administration of CSF1-Fc in CCR2-/- mice improved recovery of gastrointestinal
transit three days following IM, to the same extent as WT mice. Network cluster
analysis and RT-qPCR of the ME revealed clusters of genes induced and
downregulated by CSF1-Fc, with increased expression of anti-inflammatory and pro-resolving
genes after IM in WT and CCR2-/- mice following treatment with CSF1-Fc.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

