Infiltrating monocyte-derived macrophages and resident kupffer cells display different ontogeny and functions in acute liver injury

E Zigmond, S Samia-Grinberg… - The Journal of …, 2014 - journals.aai.org
E Zigmond, S Samia-Grinberg, M Pasmanik-Chor, E Brazowski, O Shibolet, Z Halpern…
The Journal of Immunology, 2014journals.aai.org
The liver has a remarkable capacity to regenerate after injury; yet, the role of macrophages
(MF) in this process remains controversial mainly due to difficulties in distinguishing
between different MF subsets. In this study, we used a murine model of acute liver injury
induced by overdose of N-acetyl-p-aminophenol (APAP) and defined three distinct MF
subsets that populate the liver following injury. Accordingly, resident Kupffer cells (KC) were
significantly reduced upon APAP challenge and started recovering by self-renewal at …
Abstract
The liver has a remarkable capacity to regenerate after injury; yet, the role of macrophages (MF) in this process remains controversial mainly due to difficulties in distinguishing between different MF subsets. In this study, we used a murine model of acute liver injury induced by overdose of N-acetyl-p-aminophenol (APAP) and defined three distinct MF subsets that populate the liver following injury. Accordingly, resident Kupffer cells (KC) were significantly reduced upon APAP challenge and started recovering by self-renewal at resolution phase without contribution of circulating Ly6C hi monocytes. The latter were recruited in a CCR2-and M-CSF–mediated pathway at the necroinflammatory phase and differentiated into ephemeral Ly6C lo MF subset at resolution phase. Moreover, their inducible ablation resulted in impaired recovery. Microarray-based molecular profiling uncovered high similarity between steady-state KC and those recovered at the resolution phase. In contrast, KC and monocyte-derived MF displayed distinct prorestorative genetic signature at the resolution phase. Finally, we show that infiltrating monocytes acquire a prorestorative polarization manifested by unique expression of proangiogenesis mediators and genes involved with inhibition of neutrophil activity and recruitment and promotion of their clearance. Collectively, our results present a novel phenotypic, ontogenic, and molecular definition of liver-MF compartment following acute injury.
journals.aai.org