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Publication : A specific role of integrin Mac-1 in accelerated macrophage efflux to the lymphatics.

First Author  Cao C Year  2005
Journal  Blood Volume  106
Issue  9 Pages  3234-41
PubMed ID  16002427 Mgi Jnum  J:123904
Mgi Id  MGI:3719949 Doi  10.1182/blood-2005-03-1288
Citation  Cao C, et al. (2005) A specific role of integrin Mac-1 in accelerated macrophage efflux to the lymphatics. Blood 106(9):3234-41
abstractText  In response to injury, monocytes migrate to the site of inflammation, where they differentiate into macrophages and participate in various biologic processes. However, their fate during the resolution of acute inflammation is not fully understood. Here, we show that inflammatory macrophages do not die locally by apoptosis; rather, they migrate across the peritoneal mesothelium to the lymphatics, through which they further migrate to the lymph nodes and to the blood circulation. Macrophage efflux is enhanced considerably on cell activation, and such accelerated macrophage migration is dependent specifically on integrin Mac-1, and can be blocked by addition of its antagonist. Thus, genetic inactivation of Mac-1 in mice inhibits the accelerated macrophage efflux from the inflammatory site to the lymphatics, but it does not compromise the accumulation of blood monocytes into the inflammatory site. Together, our study demonstrates that Mac-1 is involved specifically in the efflux of activated macrophages to the lymphatics, suggesting that Mac-1 may play an important role in the removal of local inflammatory macrophages and in their subsequent migration to the lymph nodes, a process that is critical to the development of the adaptive immunity.
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