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ROLE OF SPLENIC PRO-RESOLVING MEDIATORS DURING EXPOSURE TO PARTICULATE AIR POLLUTION

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Principal Investigator: Sansbury, Brian Edward
Institute Receiving Award University Of Louisville
Location Louisville, KY
Grant Number R01ES034389
Funding Organization National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Award Funding Period 01 May 2023 to 29 Feb 2028
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Exposure to ambient particulate matter (PM) is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Although the mechanisms by which PM induces pervasive multi-organ injury are still under investigation, evidence strongly implicates chronic inflammation as a primary driver of pathology. Whether exposure to fine PM (PM2.5) specifically impairs the endogenous pathways that promote the resolution of inflammation is not known. Therefore, the long-term goal of this project is to determine how exposure to PM impacts the resolution of inflammation and whether this contributes to PM exposure-exacerbated atherosclerosis. In work in progress, we discovered that in mice exposed to concentrated PM (PM2.5) for 30 days circulating erythrocytes expressed markers of premature aging and oxidative damage. In the spleens of these mice there was an expansion of the population of cells responsible for erythrocyte disposal, red pulp macrophages, while pathways related to erythrocyte turnover, heme metabolism, and iron cycling were upregulated. Additionally, we found that several factors related to hematopoiesis were induced in the tissue. These alterations were accompanied by a marked decrease in the abundance of specialized lipid mediators that promote resolution (SPMs) and their receptors. The changes in spleen are particularly critical because the spleen plays a central role in regulating immune response dynamics. It houses an important and distinct reservoir of monocytes, which can be rapidly mobilized and deployed in response to various insults. In addition to coordinating immune function, the spleen acts as a filter to remove senescent and damaged erythrocytes. Though patients survive following splenectomy, they are more likely to contract serious and life-threatening infections and have heightened risk of developing hematological malignancies and coronary artery disease among other disorders. Our preliminary studies suggest that exposure to PM2.5 may disrupt splenic homeostasis with targeted impacts on red pulp macrophages. As macrophages are the critical facilitators of erythrophagocytosis, maintenance of the splenic hematopoietic niche, and SPM actions, our central hypothesis is that PM2.5 exposure increases splenic macrophage erythrophagocytosis, which suppresses SPM production and permits local myelopoiesis, thereby enhancing monocyte egress and exacerbating vascular inflammation. To test this hypothesis, we will examine the effects of PM2.5 exposure on splenic macrophages, determine the impact of PM2.5 exposure on the splenic hematopoietic niche and delineate the contribution of splenic myelopoiesis to PM2.5-exacerbated atherosclerosis. This project will elucidate the effects of PM on the resolution of inflammation and will provide a new mechanism by which exposure to PM establishes a state of chronic, non-resolving inflammation that affects multiple organs and processes.
Science Code(s)/Area of Science(s) Primary: 41 - Cardiovascular System
Secondary: 03 - Carcinogenesis/Cell Transformation
Publications See publications associated with this Grant.
Program Officer Srikanth Nadadur
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