Journal of Immunology Research (Jan 2018)

Macrophage Polarization in Chronic Inflammatory Diseases: Killers or Builders?

  • Luca Parisi,
  • Elisabetta Gini,
  • Denisa Baci,
  • Marco Tremolati,
  • Matteo Fanuli,
  • Barbara Bassani,
  • Giampietro Farronato,
  • Antonino Bruno,
  • Lorenzo Mortara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/8917804
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2018

Abstract

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Macrophages are key cellular components of the innate immunity, acting as the main player in the first-line defence against the pathogens and modulating homeostatic and inflammatory responses. Plasticity is a major feature of macrophages resulting in extreme heterogeneity both in normal and in pathological conditions. Macrophages are not homogenous, and they are generally categorized into two broad but distinct subsets as either classically activated (M1) or alternatively activated (M2). However, macrophages represent a continuum of highly plastic effector cells, resembling a spectrum of diverse phenotype states. Induction of specific macrophage functions is closely related to the surrounding environment that acts as a relevant orchestrator of macrophage functions. This phenomenon, termed polarization, results from cell/cell, cell/molecule interaction, governing macrophage functionality within the hosting tissues. Here, we summarized relevant cellular and molecular mechanisms driving macrophage polarization in “distant” pathological conditions, such as cancer, type 2 diabetes, atherosclerosis, and periodontitis that share macrophage-driven inflammation as a key feature, playing their dual role as killers (M1-like) and/or builders (M2-like). We also dissect the physio/pathological consequences related to macrophage polarization within selected chronic inflammatory diseases, placing polarized macrophages as a relevant hallmark, putative biomarkers, and possible target for prevention/therapy.