Abstract
Abstract Immunological dogma holds that variable immunoreceptors are restricted to lymphocytes. However, recent studies demonstrate that a subpopuation of human neutrophils expresses the TCRαβ (PNAS 103:14441, 2006) and mouse thymic granulocytes exhibit rearrangement of their TCR loci (Nature 452:764, 2008). Here, we provide evidence that a subpopulation of circulating human monocytes, monocyte-derived macrophages and tissue macrophages constitutively express a TCRαβ-based variable immunoreceptor. TCRαβ + monocyte/macrophage subpopulations were assessed using with laser scanning cytometry and repertoire diversities were determined by CDR3 spectratyping. We find that human macrophages express individual-specific TCR Vαβ repertoires. Th1 or Th2 cytokine dependent in vitro differentiation triggers expression of distinct Vαβ repertoires in macrophages. Moreover, Th1 polarized macrophages show enhanced secretion of the major monocyte chemoattractant MCP-1 in response to costimulation with αCD3/CD28 . The presence of a variable immunoreceptor in macrophages together with our previous identification of the TCR in a subset of neutrophils challenge the traditional dichotomy of the vertebrate immune system into non-specific/myeloid and antigen-specific/lymphoid immunity. They unravel a much closer kinship between both lineages than commonly assumed. Supported by DFG grants KA 1078/4-1, BE 1768/5-1
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