Self-renewing tissue-resident endothelial-macrophage progenitor cells originate from yolk sac and are a local source of inflammation and neovascularization in postnatal aorta

semanticscholar(2021)

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摘要
Converging evidence indicates that extra-embryonic yolk sac is the source of both macrophages and endothelial cells in adult mouse tissues. Prevailing views are that these yolk sac-derived cells are maintained after birth by proliferative self-renewal in their differentiated states. Here we identify clonogenic, self-renewing endothelial-macrophage (EndoMac) progenitor cells in postnatal mouse aorta, heart and lung, that are independent of definitive hematopoiesis and derive from a CX3CR1+ and CSF1R+ yolk sac source. These bipotent progenitors are highly proliferative and vasculogenic, contributing to adventitial neovascularization in the aortic wall and forming perfused blood vessels after adoptive transfer into ischemic tissue. We establish a regulatory role for angiotensin II, which enhances their clonogenic, self-renewal and differentiation properties. Our findings demonstrate that tissue-resident EndoMac progenitors participate in local inflammatory and vasculogenic responses by contributing to the renewal and expansion of yolk sac-derived macrophages and endothelial cells postnatally.
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