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Usage Information

Alveolar macrophages in tissue homeostasis, inflammation, and infection: evolving concepts of therapeutic targeting
Christina Malainou, … , Ulrich Matt, Susanne Herold
Christina Malainou, … , Ulrich Matt, Susanne Herold
Published October 2, 2023
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2023;133(19):e170501. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI170501.
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Review Series

Alveolar macrophages in tissue homeostasis, inflammation, and infection: evolving concepts of therapeutic targeting

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Abstract

Alveolar macrophages (AMs) are the sentinel cells of the alveolar space, maintaining homeostasis, fending off pathogens, and controlling lung inflammation. During acute lung injury, AMs orchestrate the initiation and resolution of inflammation in order to ultimately restore homeostasis. This central role in acute lung inflammation makes AMs attractive targets for therapeutic interventions. Single-cell RNA-Seq and spatial omics approaches, together with methodological advances such as the generation of human macrophages from pluripotent stem cells, have increased understanding of the ontogeny, function, and plasticity of AMs during infectious and sterile lung inflammation, which could move the field closer to clinical application. However, proresolution phenotypes might conflict with proinflammatory and antibacterial responses. Therefore, therapeutic targeting of AMs at vulnerable time points over the course of infectious lung injury might harbor the risk of serious side effects, such as loss of antibacterial host defense capacity. Thus, the identification of key signaling hubs that determine functional fate decisions in AMs is of the utmost importance to harness their therapeutic potential.

Authors

Christina Malainou, Shifaa M. Abdin, Nico Lachmann, Ulrich Matt, Susanne Herold

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Usage data is cumulative from June 2024 through June 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
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PDF 732 336
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Citation downloads 221 0
Totals 8,845 2,641
Total Views 11,486

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