4.5 Article

Proliferation of Ly6C+monocytes/macrophages contributes to their accumulation in mouse skin wounds

Journal

JOURNAL OF LEUKOCYTE BIOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 4, Pages 551-560

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1002/JLB.3HI1119-389RRRR

Keywords

inflammation; cell cycle; IL-1; IL-6

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM092850]

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Monocytes and macrophages (Mo/M phi) play critical roles in all phases of skin wound healing. The majority of these cells are thought to be recruited from blood Mo; however, the role local proliferation of Mo/M phi in the wound has not been defined. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that local proliferation of Mo and/or M phi contributes to their accumulation during wound healing. Male C57Bl/6 mice (N = 4-9/group) were subjected to excisional skin wounding. Proliferating Mo/M phi (F4/80+Ki67+) were observed in wound cryosections, peaking on day 5 post-wounding. Cell cycle analysis on cells isolated from skin tissue revealed that wounding increased both the number and percentage of inflammatory Ly6C+F4/80lo/- Mo/M phi in the S/G2/M phases, peaking on day 6 post-wounding. In contrast, more mature Ly6C-F4/80+ cells were found predominantly in the G0 phase with less than 1% cells in S/G2/M phase following injury. In peripheral blood, Mo were very rarely found in the S/G2/M phase, suggesting that the wound environment triggered the Ly6C+F4/80lo/- Mo proliferative response. Furthermore, injury induced several potential regulators of proliferation in wounds, including IL-1 beta and IL-6, and wound Mo/M phi expressed surface receptors for these cytokines. However, wound Mo/M phi proliferation was not altered in IL-1R1 knockout (KO) or IL-6 KO mice. In summary, our findings indicate that proliferation contributes to Mo/M phi accumulation in wounds and, contrary to findings in other pathophysiologic conditions, Ly6C+/F4/80lo/- Mo/M phi proliferate during skin wound healing whereas mature Ly6C-F4/80+ M phi do not.

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