Journal article
Designer macrophages: Pitfalls and opportunities for modelling macrophage phenotypes from pluripotent stem cells
N Rajab, M Rutar, AL Laslett, CA Wells
Differentiation | ELSEVIER SCI LTD | Published : 2018
Abstract
Macrophages are phagocytic immune cells resident in every tissue that are not only important for host defence, but are also involved in tissue homeostasis, injury, and disease. Despite increasingly sophisticated methods for in vitro macrophage isolation, expansion and activation over the past three decades, these have largely been restricted to modelling bone-marrow or blood-derived cells. The in vitro derivation of macrophages from human pluripotent stem cells provides new opportunities to study macrophage biology, including the factors that impact human myeloid development and those that induce macrophage activation. While sharing many of the functional characteristics of monocyte-derived ..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
N.R. is funded by the Centre for Stem Cell Systems and the CSIRO Synthetic Biology Future Science Platform, and C.A.W. is funded by the Australian Research Council (FT150100330) and Stem Cells Australia (SR110001002).