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Myeloid cell recruitment versus local proliferation differentiates susceptibility from resistance to filarial infection.

Sharon M CampbellJohanna A KnipperDominik RuckerlConor M FinlayNicola LoganCarlos M MinuttiMatthias MackStephen J JenkinsMatthew D TaylorJudith E Allen
Published in: eLife (2018)
Both TH2-dependent helminth killing and suppression of the TH2 effector response have been attributed to macrophages (MΦ) activated by IL-4 (M(IL-4)). To investigate how M(IL-4) contribute to diverse infection outcomes, the MΦ compartment of susceptible BALB/c mice and more resistant C57BL/6 mice was profiled during infection of the pleural cavity with the filarial nematode, Litomosoides sigmodontis. C57BL/6 mice exhibited a profoundly expanded resident MΦ (resMΦ) population, which was gradually replenished from the bone marrow in an age-dependent manner. Infection status did not alter the bone-marrow derived contribution to the resMΦ population, confirming local proliferation as the driver of resMΦ expansion. Significantly less resMΦ expansion was observed in the susceptible BALB/c strain, which instead exhibited an influx of monocytes that assumed an immunosuppressive PD-L2+ phenotype. Inhibition of monocyte recruitment enhanced nematode killing. Thus, the balance of monocytic vs. resident M(IL-4) numbers varies between inbred mouse strains and impacts infection outcome.
Keyphrases
  • bone marrow
  • dendritic cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • quality improvement
  • immune response
  • endothelial cells
  • peripheral blood
  • cell therapy
  • type iii