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© Institut Pasteur - Photo by Perrine Bomme, Lise Chauveau & Olivier Schwartz, colorized by Jean-Marc Panaud
Cellule dendritique vue en microscopie électronique à balayage. Les cellules dendritiques sont cellules importantes de l'immunité. Elles sont indispensables à la mise en place de défenses contre les agents infectieux, les tumeurs ou les maladies auto-immunes. Elles interviennent également dans les processus de tolérance de greffes.
Publication : The Journal of experimental medicine

Intestinal monocytes and macrophages are required for T cell polarization in response to Citrobacter rodentium.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in The Journal of experimental medicine - 23 Sep 2013

Schreiber HA, Loschko J, Karssemeijer RA, Escolano A, Meredith MM, Mucida D, Guermonprez P, Nussenzweig MC

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 24043764

Link to DOI – 10.1084/jem.20130903

J Exp Med 2013 Sep; 210(10): 2025-39

Dendritic cells (DCs), monocytes, and macrophages are closely related phagocytes that share many phenotypic features and, in some cases, a common developmental origin. Although the requirement for DCs in initiating adaptive immune responses is well appreciated, the role of monocytes and macrophages remains largely undefined, in part because of the lack of genetic tools enabling their specific depletion. Here, we describe a two-gene approach that requires overlapping expression of LysM and Csf1r to define and deplete monocytes and macrophages. The role of monocytes and macrophages in immunity to pathogens was tested by their selective depletion during infection with Citrobacter rodentium. Although neither cell type was required to initiate immunity, monocytes and macrophages contributed to the adaptive immune response by secreting IL-12, which induced Th1 polarization and IFN-γ secretion. Thus, whereas DCs are indispensable for priming naive CD4(+) T cells, monocytes and macrophages participate in intestinal immunity by producing mediators that direct T cell polarization.