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The heme scavenger hemopexin protects against lung injury during aspergillosis by mitigating release of neutrophil extracellular traps
Ganlin Qu, Henrique A.L. Ribeiro, Angelica L. Solomon, Luis Sordo Vieira, Yana Goddard, Nickolas G. Diodati, Arantxa V. Lazarte, Matthew Wheeler, Reinhard Laubenbacher, Borna Mehrad
Ganlin Qu, Henrique A.L. Ribeiro, Angelica L. Solomon, Luis Sordo Vieira, Yana Goddard, Nickolas G. Diodati, Arantxa V. Lazarte, Matthew Wheeler, Reinhard Laubenbacher, Borna Mehrad
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Research Article Immunology Infectious disease Pulmonology

The heme scavenger hemopexin protects against lung injury during aspergillosis by mitigating release of neutrophil extracellular traps

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Abstract

Invasive aspergillosis is characterized by lung hemorrhage and release of extracellular heme, which promotes fungal growth. Heme can also mediate tissue injury directly, and both fungal growth and lung injury may induce hemorrhage. To assimilate these interdependent processes, we hypothesized that, during aspergillosis, heme mediates direct lung injury independent of fungal growth, leading to worse infection outcomes, and the scavenger protein hemopexin mitigates these effects. Mice with neutropenic aspergillosis developed a time-dependent increase in lung extracellular heme and a corresponding hemopexin induction. Hemopexin deficiency resulted in markedly increased lung injury, fungal growth, and lung hemorrhage. Using a computational model of the interactions of Aspergillus, heme, and the host, we predicted a critical role for heme-mediated generation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in this infection. We tested this prediction using a fungal strain unable to grow at body temperature and found that extracellular heme and fungal exposure synergized to induce lung injury by promoting NET release, and disruption of NET was sufficient to attenuate lung injury and fungal burden. These data implicate heme-mediated NETosis in both lung injury and fungal growth during aspergillosis, resulting in a detrimental positive feedback cycle that can be interrupted by scavenging heme or disrupting NETs.

Authors

Ganlin Qu, Henrique A.L. Ribeiro, Angelica L. Solomon, Luis Sordo Vieira, Yana Goddard, Nickolas G. Diodati, Arantxa V. Lazarte, Matthew Wheeler, Reinhard Laubenbacher, Borna Mehrad

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Figure 4

Computational model of the role of heme in aspergillosis.

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Computational model of the role of heme in aspergillosis.
(A) Schematic ...
(A) Schematic representation of key mechanisms incorporated into the mathematical model. Image made in BioRender. NET, neutrophil extracellular trap. (B and C) The predicted effect of different concentrations of alveolar extracellular heme on lung fungal load and lung injury. Lung CFU was represented as the number of hyphal fragments between septa, and lung injury is represented as death of type I alveolar epithelial cells compared with baseline representation of the lung. (D and E) Comparison of the predicted effects of NETs on lung fungal burden and injury, in the presence of 30 μM heme. X axis labels describe the model rules regarding effects of Aspergillus and NETs on type I alveolar epithelial cells. Dots represent results of simulation runs and horizontal lines represent medians. *, **, and **** denote P values of <0.05, <0.01, and <0.0001, respectively. Statistical tests: B–E, Kruskal-Wallis 1-way ANOVA with Dunn’s multiple-comparison test.

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