| Literature DB >> 29574785 |
Tatiana V Kalymbetova1,2, Balachandar Selvakumar1,2, José Alberto Rodríguez-Castillo1,2, Miša Gunjak1,2, Christina Malainou2, Miriam Ruth Heindl3, Alena Moiseenko2, Cho-Ming Chao2,4, István Vadász2, Konstantin Mayer2, Jürgen Lohmeyer2, Saverio Bellusci2, Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser3, Werner Seeger1,2, Susanne Herold2, Rory E Morty1,2.
Abstract
Trophic functions for macrophages are emerging as key mediators of developmental processes, including bone, vessel, and mammary gland development. Yolk sac-derived macrophages mature in the distal lung shortly after birth. Myeloid-lineage macrophages are recruited to the lung and are activated under pathological conditions. These pathological conditions include bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a common complication of preterm birth characterized by stunted lung development, where the formation of alveoli is blocked. No study has addressed causal roles for immune cells in lung alveolarization. We employed antibody-based and transgenic death receptor-based depletion approaches to deplete or prevent lung recruitment of immune cell populations in a hyperoxia-based mouse model of BPD. Neither neutrophils nor exudate macrophages (which might include lung interstitial macrophages) contributed to structural perturbations to the lung that were provoked by hyperoxia; however, cells of the Csf1r-expressing monocyte/macrophage lineage were implicated as causal mediators of stunted lung development. We propose that resident alveolar macrophages differentiate into a population of CD45+ CD11c+ SiglecF+ CD11b+ CD68+ MHCII+ cells, which are activated by hyperoxia, and contribute to disturbances to the structural development of the immature lung. This is the first report that causally implicates immune cells in pathological disturbances to postnatal lung organogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: alveolarization; bronchopulmonary dysplasia; lung development; macrophage; neonate; neutrophil; organogenesis; trophic
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29574785 DOI: 10.1002/path.5076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996