Cardiomyocytes induce macrophage receptor shedding to suppress phagocytosis

S Zhang, XY Yeap, L Grigoryeva, S Dehn… - Journal of molecular and …, 2015 - Elsevier
S Zhang, XY Yeap, L Grigoryeva, S Dehn, M DeBerge, M Tye, E Rostlund, D Schrijvers…
Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology, 2015Elsevier
Background Mobilization of the innate immune response to clear and metabolize necrotic
and apoptotic cardiomyocytes is a prerequisite to heart repair after cardiac injury.
Suboptimal kinetics of dying myocyte clearance leads to secondary necrosis, and in the
case of the heart, increased potential for collateral loss of neighboring non-regenerative
myocytes. Despite the importance of myocyte phagocytic clearance during heart repair,
surprisingly little is known about its underlying cell and molecular biology. Objective To …
Background
Mobilization of the innate immune response to clear and metabolize necrotic and apoptotic cardiomyocytes is a prerequisite to heart repair after cardiac injury. Suboptimal kinetics of dying myocyte clearance leads to secondary necrosis, and in the case of the heart, increased potential for collateral loss of neighboring non-regenerative myocytes. Despite the importance of myocyte phagocytic clearance during heart repair, surprisingly little is known about its underlying cell and molecular biology.
Objective
To determine if phagocytic receptor MERTK is expressed in human hearts and to elucidate key sequential steps and phagocytosis efficiency of dying adult cardiomyocytes, by macrophages.
Results
In infarcted human hearts, expression profiles of the phagocytic receptor MER-tyrosine kinase (MERTK) mimicked that found in experimental ischemic mouse hearts. Electron micrographs of myocardium identified MERTK signal along macrophage phagocytic cups and Mertk −/− macrophages contained reduced digested myocyte debris after myocardial infarction. Ex vivo co-culture of primary macrophages and adult cardiomyocyte apoptotic bodies revealed reduced engulfment relative to resident cardiac fibroblasts. Inefficient clearance was not due to the larger size of myocyte apoptotic bodies, nor were other key steps preceding the formation of phagocytic synapses significantly affected; this included macrophage chemotaxis and direct binding of phagocytes to myocytes. Instead, suppressed phagocytosis was directly associated with myocyte-induced inactivation of MERTK, which was partially rescued by genetic deletion of a MERTK proteolytic susceptibility site.
Conclusion
Utilizing an ex vivo co-cultivation approach to model key cellular and molecular events found in vivo during infarction, cardiomyocyte phagocytosis was found to be inefficient, in part due to myocyte-induced shedding of macrophage MERTK. These findings warrant future studies to identify other cofactors of macrophage–cardiomyocyte cross-talk that contribute to cardiac pathophysiology.
Elsevier