CD200R signaling inhibits pro-angiogenic gene expression by macrophages and suppresses choroidal neovascularization

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Abstract

Macrophages are rapidly conditioned by cognate and soluble signals to acquire phenotypes that deliver specific functions during inflammation, wound healing and angiogenesis. Whether inhibitory CD200R signaling regulates pro-angiogenic macrophage phenotypes with the potential to suppress ocular neovascularization is unknown. CD200R-deficient bone marrow derived macrophages (BMMΦ) were used to demonstrate that macrophages lacking this inhibitory receptor exhibit enhanced levels of Vegfa, Arg-1 and Il-1β when stimulated with PGE 2 or RPE-conditioned (PGE 2-enriched) media. Endothelial tube formation in HUVECs was increased when co-cultured with PGE 2-conditioned CD200R-/-BMMΦ, and laser-induced choroidal neovascularization was enhanced in CD200R-deficient mice. In corroboration, signaling through CD200R results in the down-regulation of BMMΦ angiogenic and pro-inflammatory phenotypes. Translational potential of this pathway was investigated in the laser-induced model of choroidal neovascularization. Local delivery of a CD200R agonist mAb to target myeloid infiltrate alters macrophage phenotype and inhibits pro-angiogenic gene expression, which suppresses pathological angiogenesis and CNV development.

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Horie, S., Robbie, S. J., Liu, J., Wu, W. K., Ali, R. R., Bainbridge, J. W., … Copland, D. A. (2013). CD200R signaling inhibits pro-angiogenic gene expression by macrophages and suppresses choroidal neovascularization. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03072

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