Return to search

Exploring immune cell functions and ways to make use of them

In addition to host defense, alternative functions of immune cells are emerging. Immune cells are crucial during healing of injured tissue, in formation of new blood vessels, angiogenesis, and also in maintaining the balance in inflammation having immune regulating functions. Over the last decade a higher degree of heterogeneity and plasticity of immune cells have been reported and immune cells develop different characteristics in different situations in vivo. This thesis investigates roles for immune cells in situations of muscle hypoxia and reduced blood perfusion, wound healing in skin and at sites of transplantation of allogeneic islets of Langerhans and on top of this, ways to steer immune cell function for future therapeutic purposes. A specific neutrophil subset (CD49d+VEGFR1+CXCR4high) was found to be recruited to VEGF-A released at hypoxia and these neutrophils were crucial for functional angiogenesis. In muscle with restricted blood flow macrophages were detected in perivascular positions and started to express aSMA and PDGFR1b and were found to directly assist in blood flow regulation by iNOS-dependent NO production. This essential function in muscle regain of function could be boosted by plasmid overexpression of CXCL12 where the effect of these macrophages chaperoning the vasculature was amplified improving limb blood flow regulation. The effect on macrophages accelerating tissue regeneration being amplified by CXCL12 was tested in a model of cutaneous wound healing where the administration of CXCL12 was optimized for high bioavailability. In the skin, CXCL12-treatment induced accumulation of TGFb-expressing macrophages close to the wound driving the healing process, and subsequently the wounds healed with an efficiency never reported before. In the last study means to circumvent systemic immune suppressive therapy required in allogeneic transplantation was investigated. Allogeneic islets of Langerhans transplanted to muscle were immediately destroyed by the host immune system. Co-transplanting islets and CCL22-encoding plasmids we could curb this fast rejection for 10 days by accumulating CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ regulatory T lymphocytes at the site for transplantation preventing islet grafts from being attacked by the host cytotoxic T lymphocytes. In summary this thesis outlines distinct immune cell subsets being essential for regain of tissue function in hypoxia, ischemia and post injury and ways to amplify specific immune cell functions in these situations that are feasible for clinical use.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA1/oai:DiVA.org:uu-299683
Date January 2016
CreatorsVågesjö, Evelina
PublisherUppsala universitet, Integrativ Fysiologi, Uppsala
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summary, info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
RelationDigital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Medicine, 1651-6206 ; 1242

Page generated in 0.0024 seconds