The immune system plays a crucial role in tissue repair and regeneration. Macrophages have been identified as master regulators of the early immune response and healing outcome, by orchestrating the temporal nature of the initial inflammation phase and coordinating the fate of stem/progenitor cells involved in regeneration. However, traditional in-vitro models for the study of macrophages often fail to fully replicate the complexity of the in-vivo microenvironment, therefore generating models which do not fully capture the extensive spectrum of macrophage behaviour seen in native tissues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF