Local Macrophage Proliferation, Rather than Recruitment from the Blood, Is a Signature of T <sub>H</sub> 2 Inflammation

Stephen J. Jenkins(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution), Dominik Rückerl(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution), Peter C. Cook(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution), Lucy H. Jackson‐Jones(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution), Fred D. Finkelman(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Nico van Rooijen(University of Amsterdam), Andrew S. MacDonald(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution), Judith E. Allen(Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution)
Science
May 13, 2011
Cited by 1,327Open Access
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Abstract

A defining feature of inflammation is the accumulation of innate immune cells in the tissue that are thought to be recruited from the blood. We reveal that a distinct process exists in which tissue macrophages undergo rapid in situ proliferation in order to increase population density. This inflammatory mechanism occurred during T helper 2 (T(H)2)-related pathologies under the control of the archetypal T(H)2 cytokine interleukin-4 (IL-4) and was a fundamental component of T(H)2 inflammation because exogenous IL-4 was sufficient to drive accumulation of tissue macrophages through self-renewal. Thus, expansion of innate cells necessary for pathogen control or wound repair can occur without recruitment of potentially tissue-destructive inflammatory cells.


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