Macrophage Functions in Tissue Patterning and Disease: New Insights from the Fly

Macrophages are multifunctional innate immune cells that seed all tissues within the body and play disparate roles throughout development and in adult tissues, both in health and disease. Their complex developmental origins and many of their functions are being deciphered in mammalian tissues, but o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental cell 2017-02, Vol.40 (3), p.221-233
Hauptverfasser: Wood, Will, Martin, Paul
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Martin, Paul
description Macrophages are multifunctional innate immune cells that seed all tissues within the body and play disparate roles throughout development and in adult tissues, both in health and disease. Their complex developmental origins and many of their functions are being deciphered in mammalian tissues, but opportunities for live imaging and the genetic tractability of Drosophila are offering complementary insights into how these fascinating cells integrate a multitude of guidance cues to fulfill their many tasks and migrate to distant sites to either direct developmental patterning or raise an inflammatory response. Wood and Martin discuss the similarities between mouse and Drosophila macrophages in the contexts of development, phagocytosis, patterning and immune response, and disease states. They discuss the advances allowed by live imaging and fly genetics, and how insights from both insect and mammalian systems can be combined.
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subjects Animals
apoptosis
Body Patterning
Cell Lineage
development
Disease
Drosophila
Drosophila melanogaster - embryology
Drosophila melanogaster - genetics
Drosophila melanogaster - metabolism
Humans
immunity
inflammation
macrophage
Macrophages - metabolism
Macrophages - pathology
migration
Review
Signal Transduction
wound
title Macrophage Functions in Tissue Patterning and Disease: New Insights from the Fly
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