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Pulmonary intravascular macrophages: Prime suspects as cellular mediators of porcine CARPA
Authors
Aharonson
Aharonson
+135 more
Atwal
Atwal
Atwal
Atwal
Basu
Basu
Bertram TA
Bertram TA
Bertram TA
Bertram TA
Bhatia
Bhatia
Cantu
Cantu
Carrasco
Carrasco
Carrasco
Carrasco
Castells
Castells
Castells
Castells
Chang
Chang
Chitko
Chitko
DeCamp
DeCamp
Domokos Csukás
Duke
Duke
Dzsi
Dzsi
Ezquerra
Ezquerra
Fine
Fine
Gabizon
Gabizon
Gaca
Gaca
György Wéber
Henson
Henson
Holt
Holt
Humphries
Humphries
Jacobson
Jacobson
János Szebeni
Klingensmith
Klingensmith
Larsen
Larsen
Leifsson
Leifsson
Lohmann
Lohmann
Longworth
Longworth
Longworth
Longworth
László Rosivall
MA
MA
McCarthy
McCarthy
Miot
Miot
Miyamoto
Miyamoto
Mizgerd
Mizgerd
Molina
Molina
Parbhakar
Parbhakar
Parbhakar
Parbhakar
Puchner
Puchner
Rudolf Urbanics
Sakai
Sakai
Schneberger
Schneberger
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Singh
Siore
Siore
Sone
Sone
Staub
Staub
Staub
Staub
Staub
Staub
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Szebeni
Thenappan
Thenappan
Warner
Warner
Warner
Warner
Warner
Warner
Warner
Warner
Winkler
Winkler
Winkler
Winkler
Publication date
23 November 2015
Publisher
'Walter de Gruyter GmbH'
Doi
Abstract
Pigs provide a highly sensitive and quantitative in vivo model for complement (C) activation-related pseudoallergy (CARPA), a hypersensitivity reaction caused by some state-of-art nanomedicines. In an effort to understand the mechanism of the pigs' unique sensitivity for CARPA, this review focuses on pulmonary intravascular macrophages (PIMs), which are abundantly present in the lung of pigs. These cells represent a macrophage subpopulation whose unique qualities explain the characteristic symptoms of CARPA in this species, most importantly the rapidly (within minutes) developing pulmonary vasoconstriction, leading to elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure. The unique qualities of PIM cells include the following; 1) they are strongly adhered to the capillary walls via desmosome-like intercellular adhesion plaques, which secure stable and lasting direct exposition of the bulk of these cells to the blood stream; 2) their ruffled surface engaged in intense phagocytic activity ensures efficient binding and phagocytosis of nanoparticles; 3) PIM cells express anaphylatoxin receptors, this way C activation can trigger these cells, 4) they also express pattern recognition molecules on their surface, whose engagement with certain coated nanoparticles may also activate these cells or act in synergy with anaphylatoxins and, finally 5) their high metabolic activity and capability for immediate secretion of vasoactive mediators upon stimulation explain the circulatory blockage and other robust physiological effects that their stimulation may cause. These qualities taken together with reports on liposome uptake by PIM cells during CARPA and the possible presence of these cells in human lung suggests that PIM cells may be a potential therapeutic target against CARPA. © 2015 by De Gruyter
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Semmelweis Repository
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oai:repo.lib.semmelweis.hu:123...
Last time updated on 15/06/2017
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1515%2Fejnm-2015-0...
Last time updated on 05/06/2019