Cutting edge: IL-1α is a crucial danger signal triggering acute myocardial inflammation during myocardial infarction

J Lugrin, R Parapanov, N Rosenblatt-Velin… - The Journal of …, 2015 - journals.aai.org
J Lugrin, R Parapanov, N Rosenblatt-Velin, S Rignault-Clerc, F Feihl, B Waeber, O Müller…
The Journal of Immunology, 2015journals.aai.org
Myocardial infarction (MI) induces a sterile inflammatory response that contributes to
adverse cardiac remodeling. The initiating mechanisms of this response remain
incompletely defined. We found that necrotic cardiomyocytes released a heat-labile
proinflammatory signal activating MAPKs and NF-κB in cardiac fibroblasts, with secondary
production of cytokines. This response was abolished in Myd88−/− fibroblasts but was
unaffected in nlrp3-deficient fibroblasts. Despite MyD88 dependency, the response was TLR …
Abstract
Myocardial infarction (MI) induces a sterile inflammatory response that contributes to adverse cardiac remodeling. The initiating mechanisms of this response remain incompletely defined. We found that necrotic cardiomyocytes released a heat-labile proinflammatory signal activating MAPKs and NF-κB in cardiac fibroblasts, with secondary production of cytokines. This response was abolished in Myd88−/− fibroblasts but was unaffected in nlrp3-deficient fibroblasts. Despite MyD88 dependency, the response was TLR independent, as explored in TLR reporter cells, pointing to a contribution of the IL-1 pathway. Indeed, necrotic cardiomyocytes released IL-1α, but not IL-1β, and the immune activation of cardiac fibroblasts was abrogated by an IL-1R antagonist and an IL-1α–blocking Ab. Moreover, immune responses triggered by necrotic Il1a−/− cardiomyocytes were markedly reduced. In vivo, mice exposed to MI released IL-1α in the plasma, and postischemic inflammation was attenuated in Il1a−/− mice. Thus, our findings identify IL-1α as a crucial early danger signal triggering post-MI inflammation.
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