학술논문
Fcγ RIIb protects from reperfusion injury by controlling antibody and type I IFN‐mediated tissue injury and death.
Document Type
Article
Author
de Brito, Camila Bernardo; Ascenção, Fernando Roque; Arifa, Raquel Duque Nascimento; Lima, Renata Lacerda; Garcia, Zélia Menezes; Fagundes, Micheli; Resende, Brenda Gonçalves; Bezerra, Rafael Oliveira; Queiroz‐Junior, Celso Martins; Santos, Anna Clara Paiva Menezes dos; Oliveira, Milton Adriano Pelli; Teixeira, Mauro Martins; Fagundes, Caio Tavares; Souza, Daniele Glória
Source
Subject
*REPERFUSION injury
*SOFT tissue injuries
*INFLAMMATORY mediators
*INTESTINAL ischemia
*GUT microbiome
*SMALL intestine
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Language
ISSN
0019-2805
Abstract
Intestinal ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) is accompanied by an exacerbated inflammatory response characterized by deposition of IgG, release of inflammatory mediators, and intense neutrophil influx in the small intestine, resulting in severe tissue injury and death. We hypothesized that FcγRIIb activation by deposited IgG could inhibit tissue damage during I/R. Our results showed that I/R induction led to the deposition of IgG in intestinal tissue during the reperfusion phase. Death upon I/R occurred earlier and was more frequent in FcγRIIb−/− than WT mice. The higher lethality rate was associated with greater tissue injury and bacterial translocation to other organs. FcγRIIb−/− mice presented changes in the amount and repertoire of circulating IgG, leading to increased IgG deposition in intestinal tissue upon reperfusion in these mice. Depletion of intestinal microbiota prevented antibody deposition and tissue damage in FcγRIIb−/− mice submitted to I/R. We also observed increased production of ROS on neutrophils harvested from the intestines of FcγRIIb−/− mice submitted to I/R. In contrast, FcγRIII−/− mice presented reduced tissue damage and neutrophil influx after reperfusion injury, a phenotype reversed by FcγRIIb blockade. In addition, we observed reduced IFN‐β expression in the intestines of FcγRIII−/− mice after I/R, a phenotype that was also reverted by blocking FcγRIIb. IFNAR−/− mice submitted to I/R presented reduced lethality and TNF release. Altogether our results demonstrate that antibody deposition triggers FcγRIIb to control IFN‐β and IFNAR activation and subsequent TNF release, tailoring tissue damage, and death induced by reperfusion injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]