Alveolar macrophages rely on GM-CSF from alveolar epithelial type 2 cells before and after birth

Author:

Gschwend Julia1ORCID,Sherman Samantha P.M.1ORCID,Ridder Frederike2ORCID,Feng Xiaogang1ORCID,Liang Hong-Erh3ORCID,Locksley Richard M.345ORCID,Becher Burkhard2ORCID,Schneider Christoph1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

2. Institute of Experimental Immunology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

3. Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

4. Department of Microbiology & Immunology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

Abstract

Programs defining tissue-resident macrophage identity depend on local environmental cues. For alveolar macrophages (AMs), these signals are provided by immune and nonimmune cells and include GM-CSF (CSF2). However, evidence to functionally link components of this intercellular cross talk remains scarce. We thus developed new transgenic mice to profile pulmonary GM-CSF expression, which we detected in both immune cells, including group 2 innate lymphoid cells and γδ T cells, as well as AT2s. AMs were unaffected by constitutive deletion of hematopoietic Csf2 and basophil depletion. Instead, AT2 lineage-specific constitutive and inducible Csf2 deletion revealed the nonredundant function of AT2-derived GM-CSF in instructing AM fate, establishing the postnatal AM compartment, and maintaining AMs in adult lungs. This AT2-AM relationship begins during embryogenesis, where nascent AT2s timely induce GM-CSF expression to support the proliferation and differentiation of fetal monocytes contemporaneously seeding the tissue, and persists into adulthood, when epithelial GM-CSF remains restricted to AT2s.

Funder

University of California San Francisco

Diabetes Research Center

National Institutes of Health

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Sandler Asthma Basic Research Center

Swiss National Science Foundation

Peter Hans Hofschneider Professorship for Molecular Medicine

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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