CD11c identifies microbiota and EGR2-dependent MHCII + serous cavity macrophages with sexually dimorphic fate in mice.
Calum C BainPieter A LouweNicholas J SteersAlberto Bravo-BlasLizi M HegartyClare PridansSimon W F MillingAndrew S MacDonaldDominik RuckerlStephen J JenkinsPublished in: European journal of immunology (2022)
The murine serous cavities contain a rare and enigmatic population of short-lived F4/80 lo MHCII + macrophages but what regulates their development, survival, and fate is unclear. Here, we show that mature F4/80 lo MHCII + peritoneal macrophages arise after birth, but that this occurs largely independently of colonization by microbiota. Rather, microbiota specifically regulate development of a subpopulation of CD11c + cells that express the immunoregulatory cytokine RELM-α, are reliant on the transcription factor EGR2, and develop independently of the growth factor CSF1. Furthermore, we demonstrate that intrinsic expression of RELM-α, a signature marker shared by CD11c + and CD11c - F4/80 lo MHCII + cavity macrophages, regulates survival and differentiation of these cells in the peritoneal cavity in a sex-specific manner. Thus, we identify a previously unappreciated diversity in serous cavity F4/80 lo MHCII + macrophages that is regulated by microbiota, and describe a novel sex and site-specific function for RELM-α in regulating macrophage endurance that reveals the unique survival challenge presented to monocyte-derived macrophages by the female peritoneal environment.