Constitutive endocytosis of CD163 mediates hemoglobin-heme uptake and determines the noninflammatory and protective transcriptional response of macrophages …

CA Schaer, G Schoedon, A Imhof, MO Kurrer… - Circulation …, 2006 - Am Heart Assoc
CA Schaer, G Schoedon, A Imhof, MO Kurrer, DJ Schaer
Circulation research, 2006Am Heart Assoc
Heme toxicity contributes to the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases,
atherosclerosis, and hemolysis associated vasculopathy. Macrophage clearance of cell free
hemoglobin (Hb) is thus an essential homeostatic function of these cells. We examined the
transcriptional response of human PBMC derived macrophages to Hb by gene array
analysis. The observed noninflammatory macrophage response was characterized by
induction of an antioxidative and antiinflammatory gene expression pattern with most …
Heme toxicity contributes to the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases, atherosclerosis, and hemolysis associated vasculopathy. Macrophage clearance of cell free hemoglobin (Hb) is thus an essential homeostatic function of these cells. We examined the transcriptional response of human PBMC derived macrophages to Hb by gene array analysis. The observed noninflammatory macrophage response was characterized by induction of an antioxidative and antiinflammatory gene expression pattern with most prominent induction of the inducible heme oxygenase (HO-1). The metabolically active Hb-CD163-HO-1 pathway resulted in synthesis of ferritin—1 of the antioxidative and antiinflammatory end products linked to heme breakdown by HO-1. This response was mediated by the Hb scavenger receptor CD163 and heme and was not related to Hb mediated depletion of reduced glutathione. In contrast to other cellular responses induced by CD163, there was no role of protein phosphorylation dependent CD163 signaling in the protective macrophage response to Hb. Instead, CD163 acted as an Hb transporter, which undergoes constitutive and ligand independent internalization and recycling between the cell surface and early endosomes. The expression of CD163 and HO-1 in macrophages of neovascularized atherosclerotic lesions suggests that the pathway described herein is active in vivo. Noninflammatory Hb clearance and intimately linked HO-1 expression may provide the long sought-after explanation for the antiinflammatory activity associated with CD163-positive macrophages.
Am Heart Assoc