A transgenic mouse model of inducible macrophage depletion: effects of diphtheria toxin-driven lysozyme M-specific cell lineage ablation on wound inflammatory …

I Goren, N Allmann, N Yogev, C Schürmann… - The American journal of …, 2009 - Elsevier
I Goren, N Allmann, N Yogev, C Schürmann, A Linke, M Holdener, A Waisman, J Pfeilschifter…
The American journal of pathology, 2009Elsevier
Whether the wound macrophage is a key regulatory inflammatory cell type in skin repair has
been a matter of debate. A transgenic mouse model mediating inducible macrophage
depletion during skin repair has not been used to date to address this question. Here, we
specifically rendered the monocyte/macrophage leukocyte lineage sensitive to diphtheria
toxin by expressing the lysozyme M promoter-driven, Cre-mediated excision of a
transcriptional STOP cassette from the simian DT receptor gene in mice (lysM-Cre/DTR) …
Whether the wound macrophage is a key regulatory inflammatory cell type in skin repair has been a matter of debate. A transgenic mouse model mediating inducible macrophage depletion during skin repair has not been used to date to address this question. Here, we specifically rendered the monocyte/macrophage leukocyte lineage sensitive to diphtheria toxin by expressing the lysozyme M promoter-driven, Cre-mediated excision of a transcriptional STOP cassette from the simian DT receptor gene in mice (lysM-Cre/DTR). Application of diphtheria toxin to lysM-Cre/DTR mice led to a rapid reduction in both skin tissue and wound macrophage numbers at sites of injury. Macrophage-depleted mice revealed a severely impaired wound morphology and delayed healing. In the absence of macrophages, wounds were re-populated by large numbers of neutrophils. Accordingly, macrophage-reduced wound tissues exhibited the increased and prolonged persistence of macrophage inflammatory protein-2, macrophage chemoattractant protein-1, interleukin-1β, and cyclooxygenase-2, paralleled by unaltered levels of bioactive transforming growth factor-β1. Altered expression patterns of vascular endothelial growth factor on macrophage reduction were associated with a disturbed neo-vascularization at the wound site. Impaired wounds revealed a loss of myofibroblast differentiation and wound contraction. Our data in the use of lysM-Cre/DTR mice emphasize the pivotal function of wound macrophages in the integration of inflammation and cellular movements at the wound site to enable efficient skin repair.
Elsevier