Litcius/Paper detail

Extracellular vesicle activities regulating macrophage- and tissue-mediated injury and repair responses

Qian Hu, Christopher J. Lyon, Jesse K. Fletcher, Wenfu Tang, Meihua Wan, Tony Hu

2020Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B300 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Macrophages are typically identified as classically activated (M1) macrophages and alternatively activated (M2) macrophages, which respectively exhibit pro- and anti-inflammatory phenotypes, and the balance between these two subtypes plays a critical role in the regulation of tissue inflammation, injury, and repair processes. Recent studies indicate that tissue cells and macrophages interact via the release of small extracellular vesicles (EVs) in processes where EVs released by stressed tissue cells can promote the activation and polarization of adjacent macrophages which can in turn release EVs and factors that can promote cell stress and tissue inflammation and injury, and vice versa. This review discusses the roles of such EVs in regulating such interactions to influence tissue inflammation and injury in a number of acute and chronic inflammatory disease conditions, and the potential applications, advantage and concerns for using EV-based therapeutic approaches to treat such conditions, including their potential role of drug carriers for the treatment of infectious diseases.

Topics & Concepts

InflammationCell biologyTissue repairMacrophageExtracellular vesicleExtracellularPhenotypeExtracellular vesiclesMacrophage polarizationSecretionMicrovesiclesChemistryBiologyImmunologyIn vitromicroRNABiochemistryGeneExtracellular vesicles in diseaseImmune cells in cancerPhagocytosis and Immune Regulation