Macrophages driven to a novel state of activation have anti-inflammatory properties in mice.

2008 
Recurrent episodes of inflammation underlie numerous pathologies, notably those of inflammatory bowel diseases. In this study, we describe a population of macrophages in a novel state of activation that mitigates colitis in mice. The cells responsible for this effect, called IFN-γ-stimulated monocyte-derived cells (IFNγ-MdC), derive from mouse spleen, blood, and bone marrow monocytes and are distinguished from known macrophage populations by mode of generation, cell surface phenotype, and function. IFNγ-MdC only arise when macrophages are cultivated in the presence of CD40L-expressing CD4 + T cells, M-CSF, and IFN-γ. IFNγ-MdC express markers including F4/80, CD11b/c, CD86, and CD274; they are negative for CD4, CD8, Gr1, CD19, CD80, and CD207. Functionally, IFNγ-MdC are defined by their capacity to enrich cocultured T cell populations for CD4 + CD25 + Foxp3 + regulatory cells; this enrichment, constituting up to 60% or more of residual lymphocytes, is attributed to an expansion, but also to a cell contact and caspase-dependent depletion of activated T cells. In mice, IFNγ-MdC delivered i.v. traffic to gut-associated peripheral lymphoid tissues, including the mesenteric lymph nodes, Peyer’s patches, and colonic mucosa, and promote the clinical and histological resolution of chronic colitis. We conclude that IFNγ-MdC represent macrophages in a novel state of activation, possessing multiple T cell-suppressive effects with therapeutic potential for the treatment of autoimmune inflammation.
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