A Metabolic Signal Guides Monocytes to Fill Empty Lung Niches
Researchers have identified a key metabolic signal that instructs circulating monocytes to differentiate into lung-resident macrophages when niches are vacant. The study reveals that interstitial macrophages, which turn over continuously, express the oxysterol receptor GPR183. When tissue-resident macrophages are depleted, recruited GPR183-positive monocytes interact with lung fibroblasts, which produce the ligand 7α,25-dihydroxycholesterol. This oxysterol signal is essential for proper monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation in the lung, positioning metabolic sensing as a critical mechanism for replenishing tissue immune sentinels.
Why it might matter to you:
This work reveals how metabolic cues, rather than just cytokines, can direct immune cell fate and tissue residency, a principle that may extend to other regenerative or inflammatory contexts. For researchers exploring stem cell therapies or transplantation, understanding these niche-specific instructional signals could inform strategies to guide therapeutic cells to engraft and function correctly in target tissues.
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