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Open AccessBook ChapterDOI

Isolation and Identification of Interstitial Macrophages from the Lungs Using Different Digestion Enzymes and Staining Strategies.

TLDR
This chapter highlights how to extract IMs from the lung using three different digestion enzymes: elastase, collagenase D, and Liberase TM, which was the most effective at IM extraction, particularly IM3.
Abstract
Interstitial macrophages (IMs) are present in multiple organs. Although there is limited knowledge of the unique functional role IM subtypes play, macrophages, in general, are known for their contribution in homeostatic tissue maintenance and inflammation such as clearing pathogens and debris and secreting inflammatory mediators and growth factors. IM subtypes have been identified in the heart, skin, and gut, and more recently we identified three distinct IMs in the lung. IMs express on their surface high levels of MerTK, CD64, and CD11b, with differences in CD11c, CD206, and MHC II expression, and referred to the three pulmonary IM subtypes as IM1 (CD11cloCD206+MHCIIlo), IM2 (CD11cloCD206+MHCIIhi), and IM3 (CD11chiCD206loMHCIIhi). In this chapter, we highlight how to extract IMs from the lung using three different digestion enzymes: elastase, collagenase D, and Liberase TM. Of these three commonly used enzymes, Liberase TM was the most effective at IM extraction, particularly IM3. Furthermore, alternative staining strategies to identify IMs were examined, which included CD64, MerTK, F4/80, and Tim4. Thus, future studies highlighting the functional role of IM subtypes will help further our understanding of how tissue homeostasis is maintained and inflammatory conditions are induced and resolved.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of the CCL2 receptor, CCR2, enhances tumor response to immune checkpoint therapy.

TL;DR: It is shown across multiple murine tumor and metastasis models that CCR2 antagonism in combination with anti- PD-1 therapy leads to sensitization and enhanced tumor response over anti-PD-1 monotherapy and that enhanced treatment response correlates with enhanced CD8 + T cell recruitment and activation and a concomitant decrease in CD4 + regulatory T cell.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of lung macrophages in health and disease.

TL;DR: In this article , a review describes how scRNA-seq and spatial transcriptomics can separate these subpopulations and help unravel the complexity of macrophage biology in homeostasis and disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human and Mouse Transcriptome Profiling Identifies Cross-Species Homology in Pulmonary and Lymph Node Mononuclear Phagocytes.

TL;DR: This cross-species expression compendium serves as a resource for future translational studies to investigate beforehand whether pursuing specific MP subtypes or genes will prove fruitful, and only 13%–23% of the top 1,000 marker genes overlap in corresponding human-mouse MP counterparts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Localization of Macrophages in the Human Lung via Design-based Stereology.

TL;DR: The precise locations occupied by pulmonary macrophages were defined in non-diseased human lungs from smokers and nonsmokers, supporting a role for IMs in smoking-related disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

CD11cHi monocyte-derived macrophages are a major cellular compartment infected by Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

TL;DR: Defining the niche where M. tuberculosis resists elimination promises to provide insight into why inducing sterilizing immunity is a formidable challenge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gene-expression profiles and transcriptional regulatory pathways that underlie the identity and diversity of mouse tissue macrophages

TL;DR: It is identified how well-characterized surface markers, including MerTK and FcγR1 (CD64), along with a cluster of previously unidentified transcripts, were distinctly and universally associated with mature tissue macrophages and how these transcripts and the proteins they encode facilitated distinguishing macrophage from dendritic cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three Unique Interstitial Macrophages in the Murine Lung at Steady State

TL;DR: It is demonstrated in the steady‐state lung that the mononuclear phagocyte system is comprised of three newly identified interstitial macrophage (IMs), alveolar macrophages, dendritic cells, and few extravascular monocytes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fas Determines Differential Fates of Resident and Recruited Macrophages during Resolution of Acute Lung Injury

TL;DR: It is shown that Fas-induced apoptosis of recruited macrophages is essential for complete resolution of ALI, and the role of Fas in determining macrophage fate during resolving ALI is studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deletion of c-FLIP from CD11b(hi) Macrophages Prevents Development of Bleomycin-induced Lung Fibrosis.

TL;DR: A novel inducible transgenic system driven by a fragment of the human CD68 promoter was able to show that eliminating CD11bhi M&PHgr; present 7‐14 days after bleomycin injury was sufficient to protect mice from fibrosis, and identify c‐FLIP and the associated extrinsic cell death program as a potential pathway through which these profibrotic M& PHgr; may be pharmacologically targeted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell Origin Dictates Programming of Resident versus Recruited Macrophages during Acute Lung Injury

TL;DR: The data show that even though they coexist in the same environment, inflammatory macrophage subsets have distinct immunometabolic programs and perform specialized functions during inflammation that are associated with their cellular origin.
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