Deep Immune and RNA Profiling Revealed Distinct Circulating CD163+ Monocytes in Diabetes-Related Complications.

Int J Mol Sci

Greg Brown Diabetes and Endocrine Research Laboratory, Sydney Medical School (Central), Faculty of Medicine and Health, Charles Perkin Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on CD163+ monocytes, which are important immune cells linked to inflammation and diabetes complications.
  • Researchers used RNA sequencing and mass cytometry to analyze these cells in adults with diabetes complications (D) compared to those without (D).
  • They found significant changes in gene expression, particularly with genes involved in the centrosome cycle and immune regulation, indicating that CD163+ monocytes behave differently in cases of diabetes complications, which may contribute to tissue damage.

Article Abstract

CD163, a scavenger receptor with anti-inflammatory function expressed exclusively on monocytes/macrophages, is dysregulated in cases of diabetes complications. This study aimed to characterize circulating CD163+ monocytes in the presence (D) or absence (D) of diabetes-related complications. RNA-sequencing and mass cytometry were conducted on CD163+ monocytes in adults with long-duration diabetes and D or D. Out of 10,868 differentially expressed genes identified between D and D, 885 were up-regulated and 190 were down-regulated with a ≥ 1.5-fold change. In D, 'regulation of centrosome cycle' genes were enriched 6.7-fold compared to the reference genome. and , the most up-regulated and , the most down-regulated gene, were detected in D from the list of 75 'genes of interest'. CD163+ monocytes in D had a low proportion of recruitment markers CCR5, CD11b, CD11c, CD31, and immune regulation markers CD39 and CD86. A gene-protein network identified down-regulated and CD11b as 'hub-nodes'. In conclusion, this study reports novel insights into CD163+ monocyte dysregulation in diabetes-related complications. Enriched centrosome cycle genes and up-regulated linked to apoptosis, coupled with down-regulated monocyte activation, recruitment, and immune regulation, suggest functionally distinct CD163+ monocytes in cases of diabetes complications. Further investigation is needed to confirm their role in diabetes-related tissue damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11432403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms251810094DOI Listing

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