Background: macrophage-targeting therapy of ischemic disease has made progress in clinic trial. However, the role and underlying mechanism of pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory polarized macrophages in modulating ischemic diseases remain incompletely understood.
Results: here we examine the effect of pro-inflammatory (LPS) and anti-inflammatory (IL-4) macrophage on ischemic diseases in a mouse ischemic hindlimb and heart model, and identify that signal regulatory protein α (Sirpα) modulates macrophage polarization induced angiogenesis via promoting phagocytosis or activating HIF1α nucleus relocation in macrophages, respectively. More importantly, the therapeutic effect of polarized macrophages is controlled by Sirpα in a time-dependent manner. Downregulation of macrophage Sirpα at the early-stage or upregulation of macrophage Sirpα at the late-stage of ischemic disease enhances the therapeutic effect. In contrast, increasing Sirpα at the early-stage or decreasing it at the late-stage leads to failure of inducing ischemic disease resilience. Mechanistically, we find that signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 and 6 (Stat3 and Stat6) mediate downregulation (pro-inflammatory polarization) or upregulation (anti-inflammatory polarization) of Sirpα, respectively.
Conclusion: Our results reveal that dynamic regulation of macrophage by Sirpα plays a critical role in alleviating ischemic diseases.
Keywords: Ischemic diseases; Macrophage polarization; Sirpα; Time-dependent.
© 2024. The Author(s).