Department of Integrative Immunobiology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States; Cell Signaling and Immunity Section, Laboratory of Immune System Biology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Department of Integrative Immunobiology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
Mucosal Immunol. 2024 Oct;17(5):1102-1113. doi: 10.1016/j.mucimm.2024.07.009. Epub 2024 Jul 27.
The olfactory mucosa is important for both the sense of smell and as a mucosal immune barrier to the upper airway and brain. However, little is known about how the immune system mediates the conflicting goals of neuronal maintenance and inflammation in this tissue. A number of immune cell populations reside within the olfactory mucosa and yet we have little understanding of how these resident olfactory immune cells functionally interact with the chemosensory environment. Identifying these interactions will allow therapeutic manipulations that treat disorders such as post-viral olfactory dysfunction. Macrophages are the most prevalent immune cell type in the uninflamed olfactory mucosa and here, we identify two distinct tissue macrophage populations in murine olfactory mucosa. P2ry12 macrophages are transcriptionally specialized for neuron interactions, closely associated with olfactory neuron cell bodies, long-term tissue residents, and functionally specialized to phagocytose cells and debris, including olfactory neurons. Conversely, MHC Class II macrophages are transcriptionally dedicated to cytokine production and antigen presentation, localized primarily within the olfactory lamina propria, more rapidly replaced by blood monocytes, and rapidly produce chemokines in response to viral infection. We further show that these macrophage signatures are present in human olfactory biopsies, and P2ry12-like olfactory macrophages are reduced in patients with long-term smell loss following COVID-19. Together, these data show that two olfactory macrophage populations regulate neurons and initiate the immune response, contributing to our understanding of both olfactory immunity and tissue-resident macrophage biology.
嗅黏膜对于嗅觉和上呼吸道及大脑的黏膜免疫屏障都很重要。然而,对于免疫系统如何在该组织中调节神经元维持和炎症的冲突目标,人们知之甚少。许多免疫细胞群存在于嗅黏膜中,但我们对这些常驻嗅免疫细胞如何与化学感觉环境进行功能相互作用知之甚少。确定这些相互作用将允许进行治疗性操作,以治疗诸如病毒性嗅觉功能障碍等疾病。巨噬细胞是未发炎的嗅黏膜中最常见的免疫细胞类型,在这里,我们在鼠类嗅黏膜中鉴定出两种不同的组织巨噬细胞群。P2ry12 巨噬细胞在转录上专门用于神经元相互作用,与嗅神经元细胞体密切相关,是长期的组织居民,并且功能专门用于吞噬细胞和碎片,包括嗅神经元。相反,MHC 类 II 巨噬细胞在转录上专门用于细胞因子的产生和抗原呈递,主要定位于嗅固有层内,由血液单核细胞更快地替代,并在病毒感染时迅速产生趋化因子。我们进一步表明,这些巨噬细胞特征存在于人类嗅活检中,并且在 COVID-19 后长期嗅觉丧失的患者中,P2ry12 样嗅巨噬细胞减少。总之,这些数据表明,两种嗅黏膜巨噬细胞群调节神经元并启动免疫反应,有助于我们理解嗅觉免疫和组织驻留巨噬细胞生物学。