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Ontogeny of arterial macrophages defines their functions in homeostasis and inflammation.

Tobias WeinbergerDena EsfandyariDenise MessererGulce PercinChristian SchleiferRaffael ThalerLulu LiuChristopher StremmelVanessa SchneiderRonald J VagnozziJennifer SchwanenkampMaximilian FischerKatrin BuschKay KlapprothHellen Ishikawa-AnkerholdLukas KlösgesAnna TitovaJeffery D MolkentinYasuhiro KobayashiStefan EngelhardtSteffen MassbergClaudia WaskowElisa Gomez PerdigueroChristian Schulz
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
Arterial macrophages have different developmental origins, but the association of macrophage ontogeny with their phenotypes and functions in adulthood is still unclear. Here, we combine macrophage fate-mapping analysis with single-cell RNA sequencing to establish their cellular identity during homeostasis, and in response to angiotensin-II (AngII)-induced arterial inflammation. Yolk sac erythro-myeloid progenitors (EMP) contribute substantially to adventitial macrophages and give rise to a defined cluster of resident immune cells with homeostatic functions that is stable in adult mice, but declines in numbers during ageing and is not replenished by bone marrow (BM)-derived macrophages. In response to AngII inflammation, increase in adventitial macrophages is driven by recruitment of BM monocytes, while EMP-derived macrophages proliferate locally and provide a distinct transcriptional response that is linked to tissue regeneration. Our findings thus contribute to the understanding of macrophage heterogeneity, and associate macrophage ontogeny with distinct functions in health and disease.
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