Long-lived self-renewing bone marrow-derived macrophages displace embryo-derived cells to inhabit adult serous cavities
Centre for Inflammation Research · University of Edinburgh · +9 more institutions
Abstract
Peritoneal macrophages are one of the most studied macrophage populations in the body, yet the composition, developmental origin and mechanisms governing the maintenance of this compartment are controversial. Here we show resident F4/80(hi)GATA6(+) macrophages are long-lived, undergo non-stochastic self-renewal and retain cells of embryonic origin for at least 4 months in mice. However, Ly6C(+) monocytes constitutively enter the peritoneal cavity in a CCR2-dependent manner, where they mature into short-lived F4/80(lo)MHCII(+) cells that act, in part, as precursors of F4/80(hi)GATA6(+) macrophages. Notably, monocyte-derived F4/80(hi) macrophages eventually displace the embryonic population with age in a process…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
12- CCCalum C. BainCorresponding
Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh
- CACatherine Alice Hawley
Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh
- HGHannah Garner
King's College London
- CLCharlotte L. Scott
Ghent University, VIB-UGent Center for Inflammation Research
- ASAnika Schridde
University of Glasgow, RWTH Aachen University
Topics & keywords
- Embryonic stem cell
- Cell biology
- Macrophage
- Population
- Bone marrow
- Biology
- Monocyte
- Immunology