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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Macrophage transfer promotes intestinal mucosal healing by encouraging transit-amplifying cell expansion in mice.

Journal:
Frontiers in immunology
Year:
2025
Authors:
Kang, Dong Su et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Transdisciplinary Medicine · South Korea
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Cellular therapy, including stem cell injections, has been proved to be therapeutic for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBDs), showing promising outcomes of disease progression. However, challenges of stem cell therapy remain, such as Crohn's disease with complex fistula, thus limiting its use and requiring another cellular therapy target for efficacy. Alternatively, macrophages have been reported to enhance recovery of damaged intestinal epithelial barriers during resolution of IBDs; thus, utilizing macrophage as a therapeutic strategy was hypothesized. In this study, we compared the regenerative capacity of wild-type andmacrophages to validate the potential of genetically modified macrophages with low-inflammatory properties. Our findings demonstrate thatmacrophage transplantation ameliorates weight loss and shortening of colon in a mouse model of colitis. Imaging mass cytometry revealed thatmacrophages particularly increase the population of transit-amplifying cells. Cellular interaction analysis further identified a subset of fibroblast to be in proximity to these epithelial cell types. Collectively, this brief study suggests that phenotype-modified macrophage transplantation facilitates mucosal healing in IBDs, which is supporting evidence for potential cellular therapy in IBD patients.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40761793/