Tissue-resident macrophages regulate lymphatic vessel growth and patterning in the developing heart

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Abstract

Macrophages are components of the innate immune system with key roles in tissue inflammation and repair. It is now evident that macrophages also support organogenesis, but few studies have characterized their identity, ontogeny and function during heart development. Here, we show that resident macrophages in the subepicardial compartment of the developing heart coincide with the emergence of new lymphatics and interact closely with the nascent lymphatic capillaries. Consequently, global macrophage-deficiency led to extensive vessel disruption with mutant hearts exhibiting shortened and mis-patterned lymphatics. The origin of cardiac macrophages was linked to the yolk sac and fetal liver. Moreover, Csf1r + and Cx3cr1 + myeloid sub-lineages were found to play essential functions in the remodeling of the lymphatic endothelium. Mechanistically, macrophage hyaluronan was found to be required for lymphatic sprouting by mediating direct macrophage-lymphatic endothelial cell interactions. Together, these findings reveal insight into the role of macrophages as indispensable mediators of lymphatic growth during the development of the mammalian cardiac vasculature. Summary statement Tissue-resident macrophages are indispensable mediators of lymphatic vessel formation during heart development and function to remodel the vascular plexus.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00