Cellular immunology
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Cellular immunology · Jan 2017
Bone marrow-derived innate macrophages attenuate oxazolone-induced colitis.
Previous studies have shown that a subpopulation of granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-dependent F4/80high CD11bhigh innate macrophages could be derived from bone marrow cells by continuous in vitro culturing. These cells could be induced to differentiate into M1 or M2 macrophages in vitro. In the current study, we sought to determine whether bone marrow cell-derived innate macrophages (BMIMs) could be used to fulfill an anti-inflammatory purpose by intravenous transplantation in vivo after being stimulated to differentiate into M2 macrophages. ⋯ In addition, colon lengths and mouse body weights were noticeably improved. F4/80+ CD206+ double-positive cells (displaying the markers of M2 macrophages) had accumulated in the colon tissue of BMIM-M2M-transplanted mice. This evidence demonstrated that bone marrow-derived BMIM-M2Ms could be used to alleviate OXZ-induced Th2-mediated inflammation in a mouse model in vivo.