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Publication : Early precursor-derived pituitary gland tissue-resident macrophages play a pivotal role in modulating hormonal balance.

First Author  Lehtonen H Year  2025
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  44
Issue  2 Pages  115227
PubMed ID  39841599 Mgi Jnum  J:361494
Mgi Id  MGI:7859144 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2024.115227
Citation  Lehtonen H, et al. (2025) Early precursor-derived pituitary gland tissue-resident macrophages play a pivotal role in modulating hormonal balance. Cell Rep 44(2):115227
abstractText  The pituitary gland is the central endocrine regulatory organ producing and releasing hormones that coordinate major body functions. The physical location of the pituitary gland at the base of the brain, though outside the protective blood-brain barrier, leads to an unexplored special immune environment. Using single-cell transcriptomics, fate mapping, and imaging, we characterize pituitary-resident macrophages (pitMOs), revealing their heterogeneity and spatial specialization. Microglia-like macrophages (ml-MACs) are enriched in the posterior pituitary, while other pitMOs in the anterior pituitary exhibit close interactions with hormone-secreting cells. Importantly, all pitMOs originate from early yolk sac progenitors and maintain themselves through self-renewal, independent of bone marrow-derived monocytes. Macrophage depletion experiments unveil the role of macrophages in regulating intrapituitary hormonal balance through extracellular ATP-mediated intercellular signaling. Altogether, these findings provide information on pituitary gland macrophages and advance our understanding of immune-endocrine system crosstalk.
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