Use of Folate-Conjugated Imaging Agents To Target
Alternatively Activated Macrophages in a Murine Model of Asthma
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Abstract
Pro-inflammatory macrophages play
a prominent role in such autoimmune
diseases as rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, psoriasis,
sarcoidosis, and atherosclerosis. Because pro-inflammatory macrophages
have also been shown to overexpress a receptor for the vitamin folic
acid (i.e., folate receptor beta; FR-β), folate-linked drugs
have been explored for use in imaging and treatment of these same
diseases. To determine whether allergic inflammatory disorders might
be similarly targeted with folate-linked drugs, we have examined the
characteristics of macrophages that are prominent in the pathogenesis
of asthma. We report here that macrophages from the lungs of mice
with experimental allergic asthma express FR-β. We further document
that these FR-β<sup>+</sup> macrophages coexpress markers of
alternatively activated (M2-type) macrophages, including the mannose
receptor and arginase-1. Finally, we demonstrate that folate-conjugated
fluorescent dyes and radioimaging agents can be specifically targeted
to these asthmatic lung macrophages, with little uptake by macrophages
present in healthy lung tissue. These data suggest strategies for
the development of novel diagnostic agents for the imaging of asthma
and other diseases involving alternatively activated macrophages