Embryonic and Adult-Derived Resident Cardiac Macrophages Are Maintained through Distinct Mechanisms at Steady State and during Inflammation
Slava Epelman(Washington University in St. Louis), Kory J. Lavine(Washington University in St. Louis), Anna E. Beaudin(University of California, Santa Cruz), Dorothy K. Sojka(Washington University in St. Louis), Javier A. Carrero(Washington University in St. Louis), Boris Calderón(Washington University in St. Louis), Thaddeus Brija(Washington University in St. Louis), Emmanuel L. Gautier(Washington University in St. Louis), Stoyan Ivanov(Washington University in St. Louis), Ansuman T. Satpathy(Washington University in St. Louis), Joel D. Schilling(Washington University in St. Louis), Reto A. Schwendener(University of Zurich), Ismail Sergin(Washington University in St. Louis), Babak Razani(Washington University in St. Louis), E. Camilla Forsberg(University of California, Santa Cruz), Wayne M. Yokoyama(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Emil R. Unanue(Washington University in St. Louis), Marco Colonna(Washington University in St. Louis), Gwendalyn J. Randolph(Washington University in St. Louis), Douglas L. Mann(Washington University in St. Louis)
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Abstract
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