Interpreting an apoptotic corpse as anti-inflammatory involves a chloride sensing pathway Journal Article


Authors: Perry, J. S. A.; Morioka, S.; Medina, C. B.; Etchegaray, J. I.; Barron, B.; Raymond, M. H.; Lucas, C. D.; Onengut-Gumuscu, S.; Delpire, E.; Ravichandran, K. S.
Article Title: Interpreting an apoptotic corpse as anti-inflammatory involves a chloride sensing pathway
Abstract: Apoptotic cell clearance (efferocytosis) elicits an anti-inflammatory response by phagocytes, but the mechanisms that underlie this response are still being defined. Here, we uncover a chloride-sensing signalling pathway that controls both the phagocyte ‘appetite’ and its anti-inflammatory response. Efferocytosis transcriptionally altered the genes that encode the solute carrier (SLC) proteins SLC12A2 and SLC12A4. Interfering with SLC12A2 expression or function resulted in a significant increase in apoptotic corpse uptake per phagocyte, whereas the loss of SLC12A4 inhibited corpse uptake. In SLC12A2-deficient phagocytes, the canonical anti-inflammatory program was replaced by pro-inflammatory and oxidative-stress-associated gene programs. This ‘switch’ to pro-inflammatory sensing of apoptotic cells resulted from the disruption of the chloride-sensing pathway (and not due to corpse overload or poor degradation), including the chloride-sensing kinases WNK1, OSR1 and SPAK—which function upstream of SLC12A2—had a similar effect on efferocytosis. Collectively, the WNK1–OSR1–SPAK–SLC12A2/SLC12A4 chloride-sensing pathway and chloride flux in phagocytes are key modifiers of the manner in which phagocytes interpret the engulfed apoptotic corpse. © 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
Keywords: signal transduction; controlled study; protein expression; human cell; nonhuman; protein function; animal cell; mouse; animal tissue; apoptosis; animal experiment; inflammation; in vivo study; in vitro study; transcription regulation; oxidative stress; phagocyte; chloride; human; priority journal; article; bone marrow derived macrophage; chloride transport; serine/threonine protein kinase wnk1; potassium chloride cotransporter 1; sodium potassium chloride cotransporter 1; efferocytosis
Journal Title: Nature Cell Biology
Volume: 21
Issue: 12
ISSN: 1465-7392
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2019-12-01
Start Page: 1532
End Page: 1543
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-019-0431-1
PUBMED: 31792382
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC7140761
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Justin Shaun Arnold Perry
    16 Perry