In mice, a subset of cardiac macrophages and Kupffer cells derive from fetal precursors, seed the developing tissues, self-renew locally, and persist into adulthood. In this study we investigated how these cells survive acute systemic inflammation. In both tissues, early-derived subsets rapidly responded to acute systemic inflammation by assuming a temporary nonclassical activation state featuring upregulation of both proinflammatory (), and anti-inflammatory () genes. During this process, transcription factor genes associated with myeloid identity (, ) were upregulated, whereas those associated with tissue specificity ( for Kupffer cells and and for cardiac macrophages) were downregulated, suggesting that the cells reasserted their myeloid identity but renounced their tissue identity. Most of these changes in gene expression reverted to steady-state levels postresolution. We conclude that these early-derived macrophage subsets are resilient in the face of acute stress by temporary loss of adaptation to local tissue-specific niches while reasserting their generic myeloid identity.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8516673 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.2001324 | DOI Listing |
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