STAT1-Dependent Recruitment of Ly6ChiCCR2+ Inflammatory Monocytes and M2 Macrophages in a Helminth Infection

Pathogens. 2021 Oct 6;10(10):1287. doi: 10.3390/pathogens10101287.

Abstract

Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription (STAT) 1 signaling is critical for IFN-γ-mediated immune responses and resistance to protozoan and viral infections. However, its role in immunoregulation during helminth parasitic infections is not fully understood. Here, we used STAT1-/- mice to investigate the role of this transcription factor during a helminth infection caused by the cestode Taenia crassiceps and show that STAT1 is a central molecule favoring susceptibility to this infection. STAT1-/- mice displayed lower parasite burdens at 8 weeks post-infection compared to STAT1+/+ mice. STAT1 mediated the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes and the development of alternatively activated macrophages (M2) at the site of infection. The absence of STAT1 prevented the recruitment of CD11b+Ly6ChiLy6G- monocytic cells and therefore their suppressive activity. This failure was associated with the defective expression of CCR2 on CD11b+Ly6ChiLy6G- cells. Importantly, CD11b+Ly6ChiLy6G- cells highly expressed PDL-1 and suppressed T-cell proliferation elicited by anti-CD3 stimulation. PDL-1+ cells were mostly absent in STAT1-/- mice. Furthermore, only STAT1+/+ mice developed M2 macrophages at 8 weeks post-infection, although macrophages from both T. crassiceps-infected STAT1+/+ and STAT1-/- mice responded to IL-4 in vitro, and both groups of mice were able to produce the Th2 cytokine IL-13. This suggests that CD11b+CCR2+Ly6ChiLy6G- cells give rise to M2 macrophages in this infection. In summary, a lack of STAT1 resulted in impaired recruitment of CD11b+CCR2+Ly6ChiLy6G- cells, failure to develop M2 macrophages, and increased resistance against T. crassiceps infection.

Keywords: M2 macrophages; STAT1; Taenia; helminth; inflammatory monocytes.