Cytokine production by M-CSF- and GM-CSF-induced mouse bone marrow-derived macrophages upon coculturing with late apoptotic cells.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Recently, we found that resident peritoneal macrophages produce MIP-2, one of the major chemokines for neutrophils, upon coculturing with late apoptotic cells, and that intraperitoneal injection of late apoptotic cells into the peritoneal cavity causes neutrophil infiltration via MIP-2. It is not known, however, whether or not macrophages are heterogeneous in such MIP-2 production. In this study, we examined changes in the surface phenotype during the differentiation of bone marrow cells into macrophages due to M-CSF and GM-CSF, and then examined the production of cytokines, namely IL-12 p40, MIP-2, IL-10, and TGF-beta, following phagocytosis of late apoptotic cells with these macrophages or LPS stimulation of these macrophages. GM-CSF and M-CSF induced macrophage populations with distinct but overlapping cell surface phenotype. Although these macrophages phagocytosed late apoptotic cells to a similar extent, they produced either IL-12 p40 or IL-10, whereas they produced MIP-2 to a similar extent after the coculture, raising the possibility that late apoptotic cells may induce neutrophil infiltration in any organs, such as the liver and lungs, where the macrophages are differentiated by either M-CSF or GM-CSF, respectively.