Molecular imaging of folate receptor β–positive macrophages during acute lung inflammation

W Han, R Zaynagetdinov, FE Yull… - American journal of …, 2015 - atsjournals.org
W Han, R Zaynagetdinov, FE Yull, VV Polosukhin, LA Gleaves, H Tanjore, LR Young…
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology, 2015atsjournals.org
Characterization of markers that identify activated macrophages could advance
understanding of inflammatory lung diseases and facilitate development of novel
methodologies for monitoring disease activity. We investigated whether folate receptor β
(FRβ) expression could be used to identify and quantify activated macrophages in the lungs
during acute inflammation induced by Escherichia coli LPS. We found that FRβ expression
was markedly increased in lung macrophages at 48 hours after intratracheal LPS. In vivo …
Characterization of markers that identify activated macrophages could advance understanding of inflammatory lung diseases and facilitate development of novel methodologies for monitoring disease activity. We investigated whether folate receptor β (FRβ) expression could be used to identify and quantify activated macrophages in the lungs during acute inflammation induced by Escherichia coli LPS. We found that FRβ expression was markedly increased in lung macrophages at 48 hours after intratracheal LPS. In vivo molecular imaging with a fluorescent probe (cyanine 5 polyethylene glycol folate) showed that the fluorescence signal over the chest peaked at 48 hours after intratracheal LPS and was markedly attenuated after depletion of macrophages. Using flow cytometry, we identified the cells responsible for uptake of cyanine 5–conjugated folate as FRβ+ interstitial macrophages and pulmonary monocytes, which coexpressed markers associated with an M1 proinflammatory macrophage phenotype. These findings were confirmed using a second model of acute lung inflammation generated by inducible transgenic expression of an NF-κB activator in airway epithelium. Using CC chemokine receptor 2–deficient mice, we found that FRβ+ macrophage/monocyte recruitment was dependent on the monocyte chemotactic protein-1/CC chemokine receptor 2 pathway. Together, our results demonstrate that folate-based molecular imaging can be used as a noninvasive approach to detect classically activated monocytes/macrophages recruited to the lungs during acute inflammation.
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