[HTML][HTML] Hemin-activated macrophages home to the pancreas and protect from acute pancreatitis via heme oxygenase-1 induction

I Nakamichi, A Habtezion, B Zhong… - The Journal of …, 2005 - Am Soc Clin Investig
I Nakamichi, A Habtezion, B Zhong, CH Contag, EC Butcher, MB Omary
The Journal of clinical investigation, 2005Am Soc Clin Investig
Hemin upregulates heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), a stress-induced enzyme implicated in
protection from a variety of injuries while its related isoform HO-2 is constitutively expressed.
The role of hemin or HO-1 in the pancreas and their potential modulation of pancreatic injury
are unknown. We show that HO-1 is induced in pancreatitis caused by caerulein and more
prominently in severe pancreatitis caused by feeding a choline-deficient diet (CDD).
Intraperitoneal hemin administration dramatically increases peritoneal and pancreas …
Hemin upregulates heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), a stress-induced enzyme implicated in protection from a variety of injuries while its related isoform HO-2 is constitutively expressed. The role of hemin or HO-1 in the pancreas and their potential modulation of pancreatic injury are unknown. We show that HO-1 is induced in pancreatitis caused by caerulein and more prominently in severe pancreatitis caused by feeding a choline-deficient diet (CDD). Intraperitoneal hemin administration dramatically increases peritoneal and pancreas macrophages that overexpress HO-1 in association with pancreatic induction of the chemoattractants monocyte chemotactic protein-1 and macrophage inflammatory protein-1α but not RANTES or macrophage inflammatory protein-2. Hemin administration before CDD feeding protected 8 of 8 mice from lethality while 7 of 16 controls died. Protection is mediated by HO-1–overexpressing macrophages since hemin-primed macrophages home to the pancreas after transfer to naive mice and protect from CDD-induced pancreatitis. Suppression of hemin-primed peritoneal cell HO-1 using HO-1–specific small interfering RNA prior to cell transfer abolishes protection from CDD-induced pancreatitis. Similarly, hemin pretreatment in caerulein-induced pancreatitis reduces serum amylase and lipase, decreases pancreatic trypsin generation, and protects from lung injury. Therefore, hemin-like compounds or hemin-activated macrophages may offer novel therapeutic approaches for preventing acute pancreatitis and its pulmonary complication via upregulation of HO-1.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation