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. 2017 Aug 15;47(2):349-362.e5.
doi: 10.1016/j.immuni.2017.07.019. Epub 2017 Aug 8.

T Cell Zone Resident Macrophages Silently Dispose of Apoptotic Cells in the Lymph Node

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Free article

T Cell Zone Resident Macrophages Silently Dispose of Apoptotic Cells in the Lymph Node

Myriam Baratin et al. Immunity. .
Free article

Abstract

In lymph nodes (LNs), dendritic cells (DCs) are thought to dispose of apoptotic cells, a function pertaining to macrophages in other tissues. We found that a population of CX3CR1+ MERTK+ cells located in the T cell zone of LNs, previously identified as DCs, are efferocytic macrophages. Lineage-tracing experiments and shield chimeras indicated that these T zone macrophages (TZM) are long-lived macrophages seeded in utero and slowly replaced by blood monocytes after birth. Imaging the LNs of mice in which TZM and DCs express different fluorescent proteins revealed that TZM-and not DCs-act as the only professional scavengers, clearing apoptotic cells in the LN T cell zone in a CX3CR1-dependent manner. Furthermore, similar to other macrophages, TZM appear inefficient in priming CD4 T cells. Thus, efferocytosis and T cell activation in the LN are uncoupled processes designated to macrophages and DCs, respectively, with implications to the maintenance of immune homeostasis.

Keywords: dendritic cell; efferocytosis; lymph node; macrophage.

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