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Liver fibrosis and CD206+ macrophage accumulation are suppressed by anti-GM-CSF therapy

Authors :
Alfonso Tan-Garcia
Fritz Lai
Joe Poh Sheng Yeong
Sergio E. Irac
Pei Y. Ng
Rasha Msallam
Jeffrey Chun Tatt Lim
Lu-En Wai
Christine Y.L. Tham
Su P. Choo
Tony Lim
Dan Y. Young
Roberta D'Ambrosio
Elisabetta Degasperi
Riccardo Perbellini
Evan Newell
Nina Le Bert
Florent Ginhoux
Antonio Bertoletti
Qingfeng Chen
Charles-Antoine Dutertre
Source :
JHEP Reports, Vol 2, Iss 1, Pp - (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2020.

Abstract

Background & Aims: Chronic liver inflammation leads to fibrosis and cirrhosis and is associated with an accumulation of intrahepatic TNFα-secreting CD206+ macrophages, which may participate in maintaining chronic liver disease in a GM-CSF-dependent manner. We aimed to elucidate the exact role of GM-CSF in the development and progression of chronic liver disease. Methods: Liver immunohistochemistry and serum quantification were performed in patients with viral and non-viral-related liver disease to compare CD206+ monocyte/macrophages, fibrosis and GM-CSF. This was followed by functional validations in vitro and in vivo in humanised mice. Results: Using multiplex immunofluorescence and histo-cytometry, we show that highly fibrotic livers had a greater density of CD206+ macrophages that produced more TNFα and GM-CSF in the non-tumour liver regions of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 47), independent of aetiology. In addition, the absolute number of CD206+ macrophages strongly correlated with the absolute number of GM-CSF-producing macrophages. In non-HCC chronic HCV+ patients (n = 40), circulating GM-CSF levels were also increased in proportion to the degree of liver fibrosis and serum viral titres. We then demonstrated in vitro that monocytes converted to TNFα-producing CD206+ macrophage-like cells in response to bacterial products (lipopolysaccharide) in a GM-CSF-dependent manner, confirming the in vivo normalisation of serum GM-CSF concentration following oral antibiotic treatment observed in HBV-infected humanised mice. Finally, anti-GM-CSF neutralising antibody treatment reduced intrahepatic CD206+ macrophage accumulation and abolished liver fibrosis in HBV-infected humanised mice. Conclusions: While the direct involvement of CD206+ macrophages in liver fibrosis remains to be demonstrated, these findings show that GM-CSF may play a central role in liver fibrosis and could guide the development of anti-GM-CSF antibody-based therapy for the management of patients with chronic liver disease. Lay summary: Liver fibrosis is a major driver of liver disease progression. Herein, we have shown that granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) plays an important role in the development of liver fibrosis. Our findings support the use of anti-GM-CSF neutralising antibodies for the management of patients with chronic liver disease resulting from both viral and non-viral causes. Keywords: Intrahepatic macrophages, GM-CSF, CD206+ macrophages, fibrosis, anti-GM-CSF neutralizing antibody, HCV, NASH

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25895559
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JHEP Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3e8ffcf6e93b4f8daad9650958290b06
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhepr.2019.11.006