[HTML][HTML] Selective chemokine receptor usage by central nervous system myeloid cells in CCR2-red fluorescent protein knock-in mice

N Saederup, AE Cardona, K Croft, M Mizutani… - PloS one, 2010 - journals.plos.org
N Saederup, AE Cardona, K Croft, M Mizutani, AC Cotleur, CL Tsou, RM Ransohoff
PloS one, 2010journals.plos.org
Background Monocyte subpopulations distinguished by differential expression of chemokine
receptors CCR2 and CX3CR1 are difficult to track in vivo, partly due to lack of CCR2
reagents. Methodology/Principal Findings We created CCR2-red fluorescent protein (RFP)
knock-in mice and crossed them with CX3CR1-GFP mice to investigate monocyte subset
trafficking. In mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, CCR2 was critical for
efficient intrathecal accumulation and localization of Ly6Chi/CCR2hi monocytes …
Background
Monocyte subpopulations distinguished by differential expression of chemokine receptors CCR2 and CX3CR1 are difficult to track in vivo, partly due to lack of CCR2 reagents.
Methodology/Principal Findings
We created CCR2-red fluorescent protein (RFP) knock-in mice and crossed them with CX3CR1-GFP mice to investigate monocyte subset trafficking. In mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, CCR2 was critical for efficient intrathecal accumulation and localization of Ly6Chi/CCR2hi monocytes. Surprisingly, neutrophils, not Ly6Clo monocytes, largely replaced Ly6Chi cells in the central nervous system of these mice. CCR2-RFP expression allowed the first unequivocal distinction between infiltrating monocytes/macrophages from resident microglia.
Conclusion/Significance
These results refine the concept of monocyte subsets, provide mechanistic insight about monocyte entry into the central nervous system, and present a novel model for imaging and quantifying inflammatory myeloid populations.
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