Proliferation of Resident Macrophages Is Dispensable for Protection during Giardia duodenalis Infections
Author(s) -
Marc Y. Fink,
Jenny G. Maloney,
Aleksander Keselman,
Erqiu Li,
Samantha Menegas,
Christopher Staniorski,
Steven M. Singer
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
immunohorizons
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2573-7732
DOI - 10.4049/immunohorizons.1900041
Subject(s) - giardia , biology , macrophage , immune system , immunity , immunology , population , lamina propria , microbiology and biotechnology , innate immune system , cx3cr1 , context (archaeology) , mhc class ii , acquired immune system , t cell , chemokine , in vitro , medicine , genetics , paleontology , environmental health , chemokine receptor , epithelium
Infection with the intestinal parasite Giardia duodenalis is one of the most common causes of diarrheal disease in the world. Previous work has demonstrated that the cells and mechanisms of the adaptive immune system are critical for clearance of this parasite. However, the innate system has not been as well studied in the context of Giardia infection. We have previously demonstrated that Giardia infection leads to the accumulation of a population of CD11b + , F4/80 + , ARG1 + , and NOS2 + macrophages in the small intestinal lamina propria. In this report, we sought to identify the accumulation mechanism of duodenal macrophages during Giardia infection and to determine if these cells were essential to the induction of protective Giardia immunity. We show that F4/80 + , CD11b + , CD11c int , CX3CR1 + , MHC class II + , Ly6C - , ARG1 + , and NOS2 + macrophages accumulate in the small intestine during infections in mice. Consistent with this resident macrophage phenotype, macrophage accumulation does not require CCR2, and the macrophages incorporate EdU, indicating in situ proliferation rather than the recruitment of monocytes. Depletion of macrophages using anti-CSF1R did not impact parasite clearance nor development of regulatory T cell or Th17 cellular responses, suggesting that these macrophages are dispensable for protective Giardia immunity.
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