Incomplete Deletion of IL-4Rα by LysMCre Reveals Distinct Subsets of M2 Macrophages Controlling Inflammation and Fibrosis in Chronic Schistosomiasis

Kevin M. Vannella(National Institutes of Health), Luke Barron(National Institutes of Health), Lee A. Borthwick(Newcastle University), Kristen N. Kindrachuk(National Institutes of Health), Prakash Babu Narasimhan(National Institutes of Health), Kevin M. Hart(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Robert W. Thompson(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Sandra White(National Institutes of Health), Allen W. Cheever(Biomedical Research Institute), Thirumalai R. Ramalingam(National Institutes of Health), Thomas A. Wynn(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)
PLoS Pathogens
September 11, 2014
Cited by 107Open Access
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Abstract

Mice expressing a Cre recombinase from the lysozyme M-encoding locus (Lyz2) have been widely used to dissect gene function in macrophages and neutrophils. Here, we show that while naïve resident tissue macrophages from IL-4Rαf(lox/delta)LysM(Cre) mice almost completely lose IL-4Rα function, a large fraction of macrophages elicited by sterile inflammatory stimuli, Schistosoma mansoni eggs, or S. mansoni infection, fail to excise Il4rα. These F4/80(hi)CD11b(hi) macrophages, in contrast to resident tissue macrophages, express lower levels of Lyz2 explaining why this population resists LysM(Cre)-mediated deletion. We show that in response to IL-4 and IL-13, Lyz2(lo)IL-4Rα(+) macrophages differentiate into an arginase 1-expressing alternatively-activated macrophage (AAM) population, which slows the development of lethal fibrosis in schistosomiasis. In contrast, we identified Lyz2(hi)IL-4Rα(+) macrophages as the key subset of AAMs mediating the downmodulation of granulomatous inflammation in chronic schistosomiasis. Our observations reveal a limitation on using a LysMCre mouse model to study gene function in inflammatory settings, but we utilize this limitation as a means to demonstrate that distinct populations of alternatively activated macrophages control inflammation and fibrosis in chronic schistosomiasis.


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