• Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Feb 2018

    RBCs Homeostatically Bind mtDNA Through TLR9 to Maintain Quiescence and Prevent Lung Injury.

    • Meghan J Hotz, Danielle Qing, Shashaty Michael G S MGS 1 Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Division and., Peggy Zhang, Hilary Faust, Neal Sondheimer, Stefano Rivella, G Scott Worthen, and Nilam S Mangalmurti.
    • 1 Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Division and.
    • Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 2018 Feb 15; 197 (4): 470-480.

    RationalePotentially hazardous CpG-containing cell-free mitochondrial DNA (cf-mtDNA) is routinely released into the circulation and is associated with morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients. How the body avoids inappropriate innate immune activation by cf-mtDNA remains unknown. Because red blood cells (RBCs) modulate innate immune responses by scavenging chemokines, we hypothesized that RBCs may attenuate CpG-induced lung inflammation through direct scavenging of CpG-containing DNA.ObjectivesTo determine the mechanisms of CpG-DNA binding to RBCs and the effects of RBC-mediated DNA scavenging on lung inflammation.MethodsmtDNA on murine RBCs was measured under basal conditions and after systemic inflammation. mtDNA content on human RBCs from healthy control subjects and trauma patients was measured. Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) expression on RBCs and TLR9-dependent binding of CpG-DNA to RBCs were determined. A murine model of RBC transfusion after CpG-DNA-induced lung injury was used to investigate the role of RBC-mediated DNA scavenging in mitigating lung injury in vivo.Measurements And Main ResultsUnder basal conditions, RBCs bind CpG-DNA. The plasma-to-RBC mtDNA ratio is low in naive mice and in healthy volunteers but increases after systemic inflammation, demonstrating that the majority of cf-mtDNA is RBC-bound under homeostatic conditions and that the unbound fraction increases during inflammation. RBCs express TLR9 and bind CpG-DNA through TLR9. Loss of TLR9-dependent RBC-mediated CpG-DNA scavenging increased lung injury in vivo.ConclusionsRBCs homeostatically bind mtDNA, and RBC-mediated DNA scavenging is essential in mitigating lung injury after CpG-DNA. Our data suggest a role for RBCs in regulating lung inflammation during disease states where cf-mtDNA is elevated, such as sepsis and trauma.

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