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Gpnmb and Spp1 mark a conserved macrophage injury response masking fibrosis-specific programming in the lung
Emily M. King, Yifan Zhao, Camille M. Moore, Benjamin Steinhart, Kelsey C. Anderson, Brian Vestal, Peter K. Moore, Shannon A. McManus, Christopher M. Evans, Kara J. Mould, Elizabeth F. Redente, Alexandra L. McCubbrey, William J. Janssen
Emily M. King, Yifan Zhao, Camille M. Moore, Benjamin Steinhart, Kelsey C. Anderson, Brian Vestal, Peter K. Moore, Shannon A. McManus, Christopher M. Evans, Kara J. Mould, Elizabeth F. Redente, Alexandra L. McCubbrey, William J. Janssen
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Research Article Immunology Inflammation

Gpnmb and Spp1 mark a conserved macrophage injury response masking fibrosis-specific programming in the lung

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Abstract

Macrophages are required for healthy repair of the lungs following injury, but they are also implicated in driving dysregulated repair with fibrosis. How these 2 distinct outcomes of lung injury are mediated by different macrophage subsets is unknown. To assess this, single-cell RNA-Seq was performed on lung macrophages isolated from mice treated with LPS or bleomycin. Macrophages were categorized based on anatomic location (airspace versus interstitium), developmental origin (embryonic versus recruited monocyte derived), time after inflammatory challenge, and injury model. Analysis of the integrated dataset revealed that macrophage subset clustering was driven by macrophage origin and tissue compartment rather than injury model. Gpnmb-expressing recruited macrophages that were enriched for genes typically associated with fibrosis were present in both injury models. Analogous GPNMB-expressing macrophages were identified in datasets from both fibrotic and nonfibrotic lung disease in humans. We conclude that this subset represents a conserved response to tissue injury and is not sufficient to drive fibrosis. Beyond this conserved response, we identified that recruited macrophages failed to gain resident-like programming during fibrotic repair. Overall, fibrotic versus nonfibrotic tissue repair is dictated by dynamic shifts in macrophage subset programming and persistence of recruited macrophages.

Authors

Emily M. King, Yifan Zhao, Camille M. Moore, Benjamin Steinhart, Kelsey C. Anderson, Brian Vestal, Peter K. Moore, Shannon A. McManus, Christopher M. Evans, Kara J. Mould, Elizabeth F. Redente, Alexandra L. McCubbrey, William J. Janssen

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Figure 3

Macrophage cluster sizes vary over time and between models.

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Macrophage cluster sizes vary over time and between models.
(A) Macropha...
(A) Macrophage UMAP split by model and time point. Vertical bars show the percent contribution of each cluster in the CD45+ sort to the macrophage pool for each model and time point. (B) Total macrophage numbers in the lungs from mice treated with i.t. LPS or bleomycin. (C–I) Estimated cell numbers for clusters in LPS (purple) versus bleomycin (green). (J) Heatmap of cell counts for each cluster at each model time point. Line graphs in B–I show mean ± SEM.

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