Non-classical tissue monocytes and two functionally distinct populations of interstitial macrophages populate the mouse lung

Joey Schyns(University of Liège), Qiang Baï(University of Liège), Cecilia Ruscitti(University of Liège), Coraline Radermecker(University of Liège), Sebastiaan De Schepper(KU Leuven), Svetoslav Chakarov(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Frédéric Farnir(University of Liège), Dimitri Pirottin(University of Liège), Florent Ginhoux(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Guy E. Boeckxstaens(KU Leuven), Fabrice Bureau(University of Liège), Thomas Marichal(University of Liège)
Nature Communications
September 3, 2019
Cited by 331Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract Resident tissue macrophages (RTM) can fulfill various tasks during development, homeostasis, inflammation and repair. In the lung, non-alveolar RTM, called interstitial macrophages (IM), importantly contribute to tissue homeostasis but remain little characterized. Here we show, using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), two phenotypically distinct subpopulations of long-lived monocyte-derived IM, i.e. CD206 + and CD206 − IM, as well as a discrete population of extravasating CD64 + CD16.2 + monocytes. CD206 + IM are peribronchial self-maintaining RTM that constitutively produce high levels of chemokines and immunosuppressive cytokines. Conversely, CD206 − IM preferentially populate the alveolar interstitium and exhibit features of antigen-presenting cells. In addition, our data support that CD64 + CD16.2 + monocytes arise from intravascular Ly-6C lo patrolling monocytes that enter the tissue at steady-state to become putative precursors of CD206 − IM. This study expands our knowledge about the complexity of lung IM and reveals an ontogenic pathway for one IM subset, an important step for elaborating future macrophage-targeted therapies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis