Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5041037 | Brain, Behavior, and Immunity | 2016 | 9 Pages |
â¢Genome-wide transcriptional profiles of β-adrenergic-stimulated macrophages were analyzed.â¢Î²-Adrenergic-stimulated macrophages located on the M2-side of the M1-M2 macrophage spectrum.â¢Î²-Adrenergic signaling effects were mediated specifically through the β2-adrenergic receptor.â¢Effects were associated with CREB, C/EBPβ, and ATF transcription factor pathways.â¢Established M1-M2 spectrum STAT transcription factors were not associated with these effects.
β-Adrenergic signaling can regulate macrophage involvement in several diseases and often produces anti-inflammatory properties in macrophages, which are similar to M2 properties in a dichotomous M1 vs. M2 macrophage taxonomy. However, it is not clear that β-adrenergic-stimulated macrophages may be classified strictly as M2. In this in vitro study, we utilized recently published criteria and transcriptome-wide bioinformatics methods to map the relative polarity of murine β-adrenergic-stimulated macrophages within a wider M1-M2 spectrum. Results show that β-adrenergic-stimulated macrophages did not fit entirely into any one pre-defined category of the M1-M2 spectrum but did express genes that are representative of some M2 side categories. Moreover, transcript origin analysis of genome-wide transcriptional profiles located β-adrenergic-stimulated macrophages firmly on the M2 side of the M1-M2 spectrum and found active suppression of M1 side gene transcripts. The signal transduction pathways involved were mapped through blocking experiments and bioinformatics analysis of transcription factor binding motifs. M2-promoting effects were mediated specifically through β2-adrenergic receptors and were associated with CREB, C/EBPβ, and ATF transcription factor pathways but not with established M1-M2 STAT pathways. Thus, β-adrenergic-signaling induces a macrophage transcriptome that locates on the M2 side of the M1-M2 spectrum but likely accomplishes this effect through a signaling pathway that is atypical for M2-spectrum macrophages.