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The Role of Macrophages in Vascular Repair and Regeneration after Ischemic Injury

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21176328

Keywords

macrophage; angiogenesis; peripheral arterial disease; M1; M2; vascular repair

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Research Grant Council Early Career Scheme [24122318, 14109519, C4024-16W]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91739103, 81922078]
  3. Hong Kong Food and Health Bureau Health and Medical Research Fund [05162906]

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Macrophage is one of the important players in immune response which perform many different functions during tissue injury, repair, and regeneration. Studies using animal models of cardiovascular diseases have provided a clear picture describing the effect of macrophages and their phenotype during injury and regeneration of various vascular beds. Many data have been generated to demonstrate that macrophages secrete many important factors including cytokines and growth factors to regulate angiogenesis and arteriogenesis, acting directly or indirectly on the vascular cells. Different subsets of macrophages may participate at different stages of vascular repair. Recent findings also suggest a direct interaction between macrophages and other cell types during the generation and repair of vasculature. In this short review, we focused our discussion on how macrophages adapt to the surrounding microenvironment and their potential interaction with other cells, in the context of vascular repair supported by evidences mostly from studies using hindlimb ischemia as a model for studying post-ischemic vascular repair.

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