4.6 Article

In situ macrophage phenotypic transition is affected by altered cellular composition prior to acute sterile muscle injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 595, Issue 17, Pages 5815-5842

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP274361

Keywords

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Funding

  1. 'NR-NET' from EU-FP7 PEOPLE program [PITN-GA2013-606806]
  2. Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  3. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund [K100196, K111941, K116855]
  4. Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute

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Skeletal muscle regeneration is a complex interplay between various cell types including invading macrophages. Their recruitment to damaged tissues upon acute sterile injuries is necessary for clearance of necrotic debris and for coordination of tissue regeneration. This highly dynamic process is characterized by an in situ transition of infiltrating monocytes from an inflammatory (Ly6C(high)) to a repair (Ly6C(low)) macrophage phenotype. The importance of the macrophage phenotypic shift and the cross-talk of the local muscle tissue with the infiltrating macrophages during tissue regeneration upon injury are not fully understood and their study lacks adequate methodology. Here, using an acute sterile skeletal muscle injury model combined with irradiation, bone marrow transplantation and in vivo imaging, we show that preserved muscle integrity and cell composition prior to the injury is necessary for the repair macrophage phenotypic transition and subsequently for proper and complete tissue regeneration. Importantly, by using amodel of in vivo ablation of PAX7 positive cells, we show that this radiosensitive skeletal muscle progenitor pool contributes to macrophage phenotypic transition following acute sterile muscle injury. In addition, local muscle tissue radioprotection by lead shielding during irradiation preserves normal macrophage transition dynamics and subsequently muscle tissue regeneration. Taken together, our data suggest the existence of amore extensive and reciprocal cross-talk between muscle tissue compartments, including satellite cells, and infiltrating myeloid cells upon tissue damage. These interactions shape the macrophage in situ phenotypic shift, which is indispensable for normal muscle tissue repair dynamics.

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