Stansfield Brian K, Ingram David A
Department of Pediatrics and Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Georgia Regents University, Augusta, Georgia ; Vascular Biology Center, Georgia Regents University, Augusta, Georgia ; Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University, 1120 15th St, BIW-6033, Augusta, GA 30912 USA.
Herman B. Wells Center for Pediatric Research, Georgia Regents University, Augusta, Georgia ; Department of Pediatrics and Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana USA ; Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine, 699 Riley Hospital Drive, RR208, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
Clin Transl Med. 2015 Feb 14;4:5. doi: 10.1186/s40169-014-0040-3. eCollection 2015.
Monocytes are primitive hematopoietic cells that primarily arise from the bone marrow, circulate in the peripheral blood and give rise to differentiated macrophages. Over the past two decades, considerable attention to monocyte diversity and macrophage polarization has provided contextual clues into the role of myelomonocytic derivatives in human disease. Until recently, human monocytes were subdivided based on expression of the surface marker CD16. "Classical" monocytes express surface markers denoted as CD14(++)CD16(-) and account for greater than 70% of total monocyte count, while "non-classical" monocytes express the CD16 antigen with low CD14 expression (CD14(+)CD16(++)). However, recognition of an intermediate population identified as CD14(++)CD16(+) supports the new paradigm that monocytes are a true heterogeneous population and careful identification of specific subpopulations is necessary for understanding monocyte function in human disease. Comparative studies of monocytes in mice have yielded more dichotomous results based on expression of the Ly6C antigen. In this review, we will discuss the use of monocyte subpopulations as biomarkers of human disease and summarize correlative studies in mice that may yield significant insight into the contribution of each subset to disease pathogenesis.
单核细胞是原始造血细胞,主要起源于骨髓,在外周血中循环,并分化为巨噬细胞。在过去的二十年里,对单核细胞多样性和巨噬细胞极化的大量关注为骨髓单核细胞衍生物在人类疾病中的作用提供了背景线索。直到最近,人类单核细胞还根据表面标志物CD16的表达进行细分。“经典”单核细胞表达标记为CD14(++)CD16(-)的表面标志物,占单核细胞总数的70%以上,而“非经典”单核细胞表达CD16抗原,CD14表达较低(CD14(+)CD16(++))。然而,对鉴定为CD14(++)CD16(+)的中间群体的认识支持了新的范式,即单核细胞是真正的异质群体,仔细鉴定特定亚群对于理解人类疾病中单核细胞的功能是必要的。基于Ly6C抗原的表达,对小鼠单核细胞的比较研究产生了更多二分法的结果。在这篇综述中,我们将讨论使用单核细胞亚群作为人类疾病的生物标志物,并总结小鼠中的相关研究,这些研究可能会对每个亚群对疾病发病机制的贡献产生重要见解。