4.6 Article

Human intestinal pro-inflammatory CD11chighCCR2+CX3CR1+ macrophages, but not their tolerogenic CD11c-CCR2-CX3CR1- counterparts, are expanded in inflammatory bowel disease

Journal

MUCOSAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 1114-1126

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41385-018-0030-7

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy [SAF2014-56642-JIN]
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [PIE13/00041, EHD16PI02]
  3. Asociacion Espanola de Gastroenterologia (Becas Nuevos Investigadores)
  4. Community of Madrid (Consejeria de Educacion, Juventud y Deporte, Programa de Garantia Juvenil)

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Although macrophages (M.) maintain intestinal immune homoeostasis, there is not much available information about their subset composition, phenotype and function in the human setting. Human intestinal M. (CD45(+)HLA-DR(+)CD14(+)CD64(+)) can be divided into subsets based on the expression of CD11c, CCR2 and CX3CR1. Monocyte-like cells can be identified as CD11c(high)CCR2(+)CX3CR1(+)cells, a phenotype also shared by circulating CD14(+) monocytes. On the contrary, their M.-like tissue-resident counterparts display a CD11c(-)CCR2(-)CX3CR1(-) phenotype. CD11c(high) monocyte-like cells produced IL-1 beta, both in resting conditions and after LPS stimulation, while CD11c(-) M phi-like cells produced IL-10. CD11c(high) pro-inflammatory monocyte-like cells, but not the others, were increased in the inflamed colon from patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Tolerogenic IL-10-producing CD11c-M phi-like cells were generated from monocytes following mucosal conditioning. Finally, the colonic mucosa recruited circulating CD14+ monocytes in a CCR2-dependent manner, being such capacity expanded in IBD. M phi subsets represent, therefore, transition stages from newly arrived pro-inflammatory monocyte-like cells (CD11c(high)CCR2(+)CX3CR1(+)) into tolerogenic tissue-resident (CD11c(-)CCR2(-)CX3CR1(-)) M phi-like cells as reflected by the mucosal capacity to recruit circulating monocytes and induce CD11c-M phi. The process is nevertheless dysregulated in IBD, where there is an increased migration and accumulation of pro-inflammatory CD11c(high) monocyte-like cells.

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