Genetic fate-mapping reveals surface accumulation but not deep organ invasion of pleural and peritoneal cavity macrophages following injury

Hengwei Jin, Kuo Liu, Juan Tang, Xiuzhen Huang, Haixiao Wang, Qianyu Zhang, Huan Zhu, Yan Li, Wenjuan Pu, Huan Zhao, Lingjuan He, Yi Li, Shaohua Zhang, Zhenqian Zhang, Yufei Zhao, Yanqing Qin, Stefan Pflanz, Karim E.I. Kasmi, Weiyi Zhang, Zhaoyuan LiuFlorent Ginhoux, Yong Ji, Ben He, Lixin Wang, Bin Zhou

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29 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

During injury, monocytes are recruited from the circulation to inflamed tissues and differentiate locally into mature macrophages, with prior reports showing that cavity macrophages of the peritoneum and pericardium invade deeply into the respective organs to promote repair. Here we report a dual recombinase-mediated genetic system designed to trace cavity macrophages in vivo by intersectional detection of two characteristic markers. Lineage tracing with this method shows accumulation of cavity macrophages during lung and liver injury on the surface of visceral organs without penetration into the parenchyma. Additional data suggest that these peritoneal or pleural cavity macrophages do not contribute to tissue repair and regeneration. Our in vivo genetic targeting approach thus provides a reliable method to identify and characterize cavity macrophages during their development and in tissue repair and regeneration, and distinguishes these cells from other lineages.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2863
JournalNature Communications
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021
Externally publishedYes

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