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Lactation-associated macrophages exist in murine mammary tissue and human milk.

Dilay CanseverEkaterina PetrovaSinduya KrishnarajahCaroline MussakChristina A WelshWiebke MildenbergerKevin MulderVictor KreinerElsa RousselSebastian Anton StifterMyrto AndreadouPascale ZwickyNicole Puertas JuradoHubert RehrauerGe TanZhaoyuan LiuCamille BlériotFrancesca RonchiAndrew J MacphersonFlorent GinhouxGiancarlo NatalucciBurkhard BecherMelanie Greter
Published in: Nature immunology (2023)
Macrophages are involved in immune defense, organogenesis and tissue homeostasis. Macrophages contribute to the different phases of mammary gland remodeling during development, pregnancy and involution postlactation. Less is known about the dynamics of mammary gland macrophages in the lactation stage. Here, we describe a macrophage population present during lactation in mice. By multiparameter flow cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing, we identified a lactation-induced CD11c + CX3CR1 + Dectin-1 + macrophage population (liMac) that was distinct from the two resident F4/80 hi and F4/80 lo macrophage subsets present pregestationally. LiMacs were predominantly monocyte-derived and expanded by proliferation in situ concomitant with nursing. LiMacs developed independently of IL-34, but required CSF-1 signaling and were partly microbiota-dependent. Locally, they resided adjacent to the basal cells of the alveoli and extravasated into the milk. We found several macrophage subsets in human milk that resembled liMacs. Collectively, these findings reveal the emergence of unique macrophages in the mammary gland and milk during lactation.
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