4.6 Article

Two Unique Human Decidual Macrophage Populations

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 186, Issue 4, Pages 2633-2642

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1003153

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI053330]

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Several important events occur at the maternal-fetal interface, including generation of maternal-fetal tolerance, remodeling of the uterine smooth muscle and its spiral arteries and glands, and placental construction. Fetal-derived extravillous trophoblasts come in direct contact with maternal decidual leukocytes. Macrophages represent similar to 20% of the leukocytes at this interface. In this study, two distinct subsets of CD14(+) decidual macrophages (dM phi s) are found to be present in first-trimester decidual tissue, CD11c(HI) and CD11c(LO). Gene expression analysis by RNA microarray revealed that 379 probes were differentially expressed between these two populations. Analysis of the two subsets revealed several clusters of coregulated genes that suggest distinct functions for these subsets in tissue remodeling, growth, and development. CD11c(HI) dM phi s express genes associated with lipid metabolism and inflammation, whereas CD11c(LO) dM phi s express genes associated with extracellular matrix formation, muscle regulation, and tissue growth. The CD11c(HI) dM phi s also differ from CD11c(LO) dM phi s in their ability to process protein Ag and are likely to be the major APCs in the decidua. Moreover, these populations each secrete both proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines that may contribute to the balance that establishes fetal-maternal tolerance. Thus, they do not fit the conventional M1/M2 categorization. The Journal of Immunology, 2011, 186: 2633-2642.

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