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Monocyte Progenitors Give Rise to Multinucleated Giant Cells
Anne Lößlein
Florens Lohrmann
Lisa Scheuermann
Kourosh Gharun
Jana Neuber
Julia Kolter
Aaron James Forde
Christian Kleimeyer
Ying Yee Poh
Matthias Mack
Antigoni Triantafyllopoulou
Micah D. Dunlap
Shabaana A. Khader
Maximilian Seidl
Alexandra Hölscher
Christoph Hölscher
Xue Li Guan
Anca Dorhoi
Philipp Henneke
出版
Universität
, 2021
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=MHaEzgEACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
Abstract: The immune response to mycobacteria is characterized by granuloma formation, which features multinucleated giant cells as a unique macrophage type. We previously found that multinucleated giant cells result from Toll-like receptor-induced DNA damage and cell autonomous cell cycle modifications. However, the giant cell progenitor identity remained unclear. Here, we show that the giant cell-forming potential is a particular trait of monocyte progenitors. Common monocyte progenitors potently produce cytokines in response to mycobacteria and their immune-active molecules. In addition, common monocyte progenitors accumulate cholesterol and lipids, which are prerequisites for giant cell transformation. Inducible monocyte progenitors are so far undescribed circulating common monocyte progenitor descendants with high giant cell-forming potential. Monocyte progenitors are induced in mycobacterial infections and localize to granulomas. Accordingly, they exhibit important immunological functions in mycobacterial infections. Moreover, their signature trait of high cholesterol metabolism may be piggy-backed by mycobacteria to create a permissive niche