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Reprogramming of profibrotic macrophages for treatment of bleomycin‐induced pulmonary fibrosis
Author(s) -
Zhang Fenghua,
Ayaub Ehab A,
Wang Bingbing,
PuchuluCampanella Estela,
Li YenHsing,
Hettiarachchi Suraj U,
Lindeman Spencer D,
Luo Qian,
Rout Sasmita,
Srinivasarao Madduri,
Cox Abigail,
Tsoyi Konstantin,
NickersonNutter Cheryl,
Rosas Ivan O,
Low Philip S
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
embo molecular medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.923
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1757-4684
pISSN - 1757-4676
DOI - 10.15252/emmm.202012034
Subject(s) - library science , drug discovery , chemistry , medicine , computer science , biochemistry
Fibrotic diseases cause organ failure that lead to ~45% of all deaths in the United States. Activated macrophages stimulate fibrosis by secreting cytokines that induce fibroblasts to synthesize collagen and extracellular matrix proteins. Although suppression of macrophage‐derived cytokine production can halt progression of fibrosis, therapeutic agents that prevent release of these cytokines (e.g., TLR7 agonists) have proven too toxic to administer systemically. Based on the expression of folate receptor β solely on activated myeloid cells, we have created a folate‐targeted TLR7 agonist (FA‐TLR7‐54) that selectively accumulates in profibrotic macrophages and suppresses fibrosis‐inducing cytokine production. We demonstrate that FA‐TLR7‐54 reprograms M2‐like fibrosis‐inducing macrophages into fibrosis‐suppressing macrophages, resulting in dramatic declines in profibrotic cytokine release, hydroxyproline biosynthesis, and collagen deposition, with concomitant increases in alveolar airspaces. Although nontargeted TLR7‐54 is lethal at fibrosis‐suppressing doses, FA‐TLR7‐54 halts fibrosis without evidence of toxicity. Taken together, FA‐TLR7‐54 is shown to constitute a novel and potent approach for treating fibrosis without causing dose‐limiting systemic toxicities.

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