TLR7 Mediates Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome in Sepsis by Sensing Extracellular miR-146a

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY(2022)

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Abstract
TLR7 (Toll-like receptor 7), the sensor for single-stranded RNA, contributes to systemic inflammation and mortality in murine polymicrobial sepsis. Recent studies show that extracellular miR146a-5p serves as a TLR7 ligand and plays an important role in regulating host innate immunity. However, the role of miR-146a-5p and TLR7 signaling in pulmonary inflammation, endothelial activation, and sepsis-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome remains unclear. Here, we show that intratracheal administration of exogenous miR-146a-5p in mice evokes lung inflammation, activates endothelium, and increases endothelial permeability via TLR7-dependent mechanisms. TLR7 deficiency attenuates pulmonary barrier dysfunction and reduces lung inflammatory response in a murine sepsis model. Moreover, the impact of miR-146a-5p2TLR7 signaling on endothelial activation appears to be a secondary effect because TLR7 is undetectable in the human pulmonary artery and microvascular endothelial cells (ECs), which show no response to direct miR-146a-5p treatment in vitro. Both conditioned media of miR-146a5p2treated macrophages (Mf) and septic sera of wild-type mice induce a marked EC barrier disruption in vitro, whereas Mf conditioned media or septic sera of TLR72/2 mice do not exhibit such effect. Cytokine array and pathway enrichment analysis of the Mf conditioned media and septic sera identify TNF alpha (tumor necrosis factor a) as the main downstream effector of miR-146a-5p2TLR7 signaling responsible for the EC barrier dysfunction, which is further supported by neutralizing anti-TNF alpha antibody intervention. Together, these data demonstrate that TLR7 activation elicits pulmonary inflammation and endothelial barrier disruption by sensing extracellular miR-146a-5p and contributes to sepsis-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome.
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Key words
sepsis, Toll-like receptors, acute respiratory distress syndrome, microRNAs, innate immunity
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