4.8 Article

Pulmonary macrophage transplantation therapy

Journal

NATURE
Volume 514, Issue 7523, Pages 450-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13807

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HL085453, R21 HL106134, R01HL118342, 8UL1TR000077-05, AR-47363, DK78392, DK90971]
  2. American Thoracic Society Foundation Unrestricted Research Grant
  3. CCHMC Foundation Trustee Grant
  4. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [Exc 62/1]
  5. Else Kroner-Fresenius Stiftung
  6. Eva-Luise Koehler Research Prize for Rare Diseases
  7. Pulmonary Biology Division, CCHMC
  8. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26461498] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Bone-marrow transplantation is an effective cell therapy but requires myeloablation, which increases infection risk and mortality. Recent lineage-tracing studies documenting that resident macrophage populations self-maintain independently of haematological progenitors prompted us to consider organ-targeted, cell-specific therapy. Here, using granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor-beta-deficient (Csf2rb(-/-)) mice that develop a myeloid cell disorder identical to hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (hPAP) in children with CSF2RA or CSF2RB mutations, we show that pulmonary macrophage transplantation (PMT) of either wild-type or Csf2rb-gene-corrected macrophages without myeloablation was safe and well-tolerated and that one administration corrected the lung disease, secondary systemic manifestations and normalized disease-related biomarkers, and prevented disease-specific mortality. PMT-derived alveolar macrophages persisted for at least one year as did therapeutic effects. Our findings identify mechanisms regulating alveolar macrophage population size in health and disease, indicate that GM-CSF is required for phenotypic determination of alveolar macrophages, and support translation of PMT as the first specific therapy for children with hPAP.

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