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      Macrophages from IL-12p40-deficient mice have a bias toward the M2 activation profile.

      Journal of Leukocyte Biology
      Animals, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Interferon-gamma, pharmacology, Interleukin-12, deficiency, genetics, Macrophage Activation, Macrophages, Peritoneal, metabolism, parasitology, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Nitric Oxide, biosynthesis, Recombinant Proteins, Transforming Growth Factor beta, secretion, Trypanosoma cruzi, physiology, Up-Regulation, drug effects

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          Abstract

          Recent studies have provided evidence that macrophages from Th1-prone mouse strains respond with an M1 profile, and macrophages from Th2-prone mouse strains respond with an M2 profile, characterized by the dominant production of NO or TGF-beta 1, respectively. We have shown that peritoneal macrophages from IL-12p40 gene knockout mice have a bias toward the M2 profile, spontaneously secreting large amounts of TGF-beta 1 and responding to rIFN-gamma with weak NO production. Moreover, IL-12p40KO macrophages are more permissive to Trypanosoma cruzi replication than their wild-type littermate cells. Prolonged incubation with rIL-12 fails to reverse the M2 polarization of IL-12p40KO macrophages. However, TGF-beta 1 is directly implicated in sustaining the M2 profile because its inhibition increases NO release from IL-12p40KO macrophages. IFN-gamma deficiency is apparently not the reason for TGF-beta 1 up-regulation, because rIFN-gamma KO macrophages produce normal amounts of this cytokine. These findings raise the possibility that IL-12 has a central role in driving macrophage polarization, regulating their intrinsic ability to respond against intracellular parasites.

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