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Publication : CD64 distinguishes macrophages from dendritic cells in the gut and reveals the Th1-inducing role of mesenteric lymph node macrophages during colitis.

First Author  Tamoutounour S Year  2012
Journal  Eur J Immunol Volume  42
Issue  12 Pages  3150-66
PubMed ID  22936024 Mgi Jnum  J:190343
Mgi Id  MGI:5448617 Doi  10.1002/eji.201242847
Citation  Tamoutounour S, et al. (2012) CD64 distinguishes macrophages from dendritic cells in the gut and reveals the Th1-inducing role of mesenteric lymph node macrophages during colitis. Eur J Immunol 42(12):3150-66
abstractText  Dendritic cells (DCs) and monocyte-derived macrophages (MPhis) are key components of intestinal immunity. However, the lack of surface markers differentiating MPhis from DCs has hampered understanding of their respective functions. Here, we demonstrate that, using CD64 expression, MPhis can be distinguished from DCs in the intestine of both mice and humans. On that basis, we revisit the phenotype of intestinal DCs in the absence of contaminating MPhis and we delineate a developmental pathway in the healthy intestine that leads from newly extravasated Ly-6C(hi) monocytes to intestinal MPhis. We determine how inflammation impacts this pathway and show that T cell-mediated colitis is associated with massive recruitment of monocytes to the intestine and the mesenteric lymph node (MLN). There, these monocytes differentiate into inflammatory MPhis endowed with phagocytic activity and the ability to produce inducible nitric oxide synthase. In the MLNs, inflammatory MPhis are located in the T-cell zone and trigger the induction of proinflammatory T cells. Finally, T cell-mediated colitis develops irrespective of intestinal DC migration, an unexpected finding supporting an important role for MLN-resident inflammatory MPhis in the etiology of T cell-mediated colitis.
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