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Publication : Tissue niche occupancy determines the contribution of fetal- versus bone-marrow-derived macrophages to IgG effector functions.

First Author  Wöhner M Year  2024
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  43
Issue  2 Pages  113757
PubMed ID  38354088 Mgi Jnum  J:350668
Mgi Id  MGI:7613952 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2024.113757
Citation  Wohner M, et al. (2024) Tissue niche occupancy determines the contribution of fetal- versus bone-marrow-derived macrophages to IgG effector functions. Cell Rep 43(2):113757
abstractText  Understanding the mechanisms underlying cytotoxic immunoglobulin G (IgG) activity is critical for improving therapeutic antibody activity and inhibiting autoantibody-mediated tissue pathology. While prior research highlights the important role of the mononuclear phagocytic system for removing opsonized target cells, it remains unclear which monocyte or macrophage subsets stemming from fetal or post-natal bone-marrow (BM)-associated definitive hematopoiesis are involved in target cell depletion. By using a titrated irradiation approach as well as Kupffer-cell-specific deletion of activated Fcgamma receptor signaling, we establish conditions under which the contribution of BM-derived monocytes versus yolk-sac-derived liver-resident macrophages to cytotoxic IgG activity can be studied. Our results demonstrate that liver-resident macrophages originating from either fetal or adult hematopoiesis play a central role in IgG-mediated depletion of opsonized target cells from the peripheral blood under steady-state conditions, highlighting the impact of the tissue niche and not macrophage origin for cytotoxic antibody activity.
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