Blood monocytes: distinct subsets, how they relate to dendritic cells, and their possible roles in the regulation of T‐cell responses
Top Cited Papers
- 8 April 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Immunology & Cell Biology
- Vol. 86 (5) , 398-408
- https://doi.org/10.1038/icb.2008.19
Abstract
Monocytes can have important effects on the polarization and expansion of lymphocytes and may contribute to shaping primary and memory T-cell responses in humans and mice. However, their precise contribution in terms of cellular subsets and the molecular mechanisms involved remains to be determined. Mouse monocytes originate from a bone marrow progenitor, the macrophage and DC precursor (MDP), which also gives rise to conventional dendritic cells through a separate differentiation pathway. Mouse monocytes may be grouped in different functional subsets. The CD115+ Gr1+ ‘inflammatory’ monocyte subset can give rise not only to immunostimulatory ‘TipDCs’ in infected mice but also to immunosuppressive ‘myeloid-derived suppressor cells’ in tumor-bearing mice. CD115+ Gr1+ monocytes can also contribute to the renewal of several resident subsets of macrophages and DCs, such as microglia and Langerhans cells, in inflammatory conditions. The CD115+ Gr1− ‘resident’ monocyte subset patrols blood vessels in the steady state and extravasates during infection with Listeria monocytogenes or in the healing myocardium. CD115+ Gr1− monocytes are responsible for an early and transient inflammatory burst during Lm infection, which may play a role in the recruitment of other effector cells and subsequently differentiate toward ‘M2’-like macrophages that may be involved in wound healing. More research will no doubt confirm the existence of more functional subsets, the developmental relationship between mouse subsets as well as the correspondence between mouse subsets and human subsets of monocytes. We will discuss here the potential roles of monocytes in the immune response, the existence of functional subsets and their relationship with other myeloid cells, including dendritic cells.Keywords
This publication has 111 references indexed in Scilit:
- Immunosurveillance by Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells Trafficking through Blood, Lymph, and Peripheral TissuesCell, 2007
- Optimal induction of T helper 17 cells in humans requires T cell receptor ligation in the context of Toll-like receptor-activated monocytesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Identification of clonogenic common Flt3+M-CSFR+ plasmacytoid and conventional dendritic cell progenitors in mouse bone marrowNature Immunology, 2007
- Memory CD8+ T cells mediate antibacterial immunity via CCL3 activation of TNF/ROI+ phagocytesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2007
- Interleukins 1β and 6 but not transforming growth factor-β are essential for the differentiation of interleukin 17–producing human T helper cellsNature Immunology, 2007
- Origin of dendritic cells in peripheral lymphoid organs of miceNature Immunology, 2007
- Monocytes give rise to mucosal, but not splenic, conventional dendritic cellsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- Intrasplenic steady-state dendritic cell precursors that are distinct from monocytesNature Immunology, 2006
- Toll-like receptor control of the adaptive immune responsesNature Immunology, 2004
- Mouse and human dendritic cell subtypesNature Reviews Immunology, 2002