Litcius/Paper detail

Interleukin-34-dependent perivascular macrophages promote vascular function in the brain

Hannah Van Hove, Chaim Glück, Wiebke Mildenberger, Ekaterina Petrova, Upasana Maheshwari, Philipp Häne, Victor Kreiner, Mitchell Bijnen, Caroline Mussak, Sebastian G. Utz, Jeanne Droux, Florian Ingelfinger, Christian Ashworth, Sebastian A. Stifter, E. Roussel, Iva Lelios, Marijne Vermeer, Sheng‐Fu Huang, Quanyu Zhou, Zhenyue Chen, Charlotte Calvet, Soline Bourgeois, Johanna Schaffenrath, Daniel Razansky, J Juang, Kenichi Asano, Paweł Pelczar, Sarah Mundt, Bruno Weber, Susanne Wegener, Sònia Tugues, Christian Stockmann, Burkhard Becher, Annika Keller, Mohamad El Amki, Melanie Greter

2025Immunity17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

perivascular BAMs exhibited increased hemodynamics in arterial networks. These findings reveal a crosstalk between vascular cells and CNS macrophages regulating cerebrovascular function.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyFunction (biology)ImmunologyCell biologyNeuroscienceInterleukinBrain functionCytokineNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19Immune cells in cancer