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Interactions between Macrophages and Mast Cells in the Female Reproductive System

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23105414

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innate immunity; mast cells; macrophages; polarization; cytokines; inflammation; peritoneum; uterus; menstruation; pregnancy

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Mast cells and macrophages are innate immune cells that play important roles in maintaining tissue homeostasis and responding to inflammatory conditions. Their crosstalk is essential for optimal coordination of their functions.
Mast cells (MCs) and macrophages (M phi s) are innate immune cells that differentiate from early common myeloid precursors and reside in all body tissues. MCs have a unique capacity to neutralize/degrade toxic proteins, and they are hypothesized as being able to adopt two alternative polarization profiles, similar to M phi s, with distinct or even opposite roles. M phi s are very plastic phagocytic cells that are devoted to the elimination of senescent/anomalous endogenous entities (to maintain tissue homeostasis), and to the recognition and elimination of exogenous threats. They can adopt several functional phenotypes in response to microenvironmental cues, whose extreme profiles are the inflammatory/killing phenotype (M1) and the anti-inflammatory/healing phenotype (M2). The concomitant and abundant presence of these two cell types and the partial overlap of their defensive and homeostatic functions leads to the hypothesis that their crosstalk is necessary for the optimal coordination of their functions, both under physiological and pathological conditions. This review will examine the relationship between MCs and M phi s in some situations of homeostatic regulation (menstrual cycle, embryo implantation), and in some inflammatory conditions in the same organs (endometriosis, preeclampsia), in order to appreciate the importance of their cross-regulation.

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