Abstract

Tissue-resident macrophages play an important role in clearance, development, and regulation of metabolism. They also function as sentinel immune cells, initiating inflammatory responses, clearing inflammatory debris, and maintaining homeostatic tissue environment. In the cochlea, the roles of tissue-resident macrophages include maintaining steady-state tissues, immunological defense, and repairing pathological conditions associated with noise, ototoxic drugs, aging, and various pathogens. Perivascular macrophages (PVMs) are a unique subset of tissue-resident macrophages that are closely associated with blood vessels and have unique expression markers in certain tissues. PVMs are found in the inner ear, brain, skin, liver, and retina. The origin of PVMs in the inner ear is unclear, but they are already present during embryonic development. PVMs are members of the blood labyrinth barrier and regulate blood vessel permeability in the stria vascularis, which lies on the lateral wall of the cochlear duct and is crucial for endocochlear potential formation. The cytoplasm of strial PVMs can contain pigment granules that increase in number with age. Strial PVMs are activated by the loss of Slc26a4 in the cochleae, and they subsequently phagocytose aggregated pigment granules and possibly degenerated intermediate cells. This review summarizes the current knowledge of characteristic features and proposed roles of PVMs in the stria vascularis. We also address macrophage activation and involvement of pigment granules with the loss of Slc26a4 in the cochleae.

Highlights

  • Macrophages are present in almost all body tissues and display location-specific functions and gene expression profiles

  • We provide a comprehensive overview of the origins, specifications, possible functions, and activation of tissue-resident macrophages in the stria vascularis

  • Tissue-resident macrophages in the stria vascularis of the adult cochleae are positive for F4/80, CD68, Iba1, and CD11b [16–18] and are mainly localized around blood vessels, suggesting that almost all of them are Perivascular macrophages (PVMs)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Macrophages are present in almost all body tissues and display location-specific functions and gene expression profiles. These “tissue-resident macrophages” play an important role in the clearance, development, and regulation of metabolism depending on the tissue location and environment [1]. We provide a comprehensive overview of the origins, specifications, possible functions, and activation of tissue-resident macrophages in the stria vascularis. We relate these with the recent findings of our study in the field of macrophage research and highlight important questions that remain unanswered

SOURCE OF TISSUE RESIDENT MACROPHAGE IN STRIA VASCULARIS
INCREMENT AND ACTIVATION OF TISSUE RESIDENT MACROPHAGE IN PENDRED SYNDROME
MACROPHAGE AND AUTOINFLAMMATION OF THE INNER EAR
CONCLUSION
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