Mice lacking both macrophage- and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor have macrophages and coexistent osteopetrosis and severe lung disease

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Abstract

Mice deficient in granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF, CSF-1) were generated by interbreeding GM-CSF-deficient mice generated by gene targeting (genotype GM-/-) with M-CSF-deficient osteopetrotic mice (genotype M-/-, op/op). Mice deficient in both GM-CSF and M-CSF (genotype GM-/-M-/-) are viable and have coexistent features corresponding to mice deficient in either factor alone. Like M-CSF-deficient mice, they have osteopetrosis and are toothless because of failure of incisor eruption. Like GM-CSF-deficient mice, they have a characteristic alveolarproteinosis-like lung pathology, but it is more severe than that of GM-CSF-deficient mice and is often fatal. In particular, in GM-/-M-/- mice the accumulation of lipo-proteinaceous alveolar material is more marked, and bacterial pneumonic infections are more prevalent and more extensive, particularly involving Gram-negative bacteria. Neutrophilia consistently accompanies pulmonary infections, and some older GM-/-M-/- mice have polycythemia. Survival of GM-/-M-/- mice is significantly reduced compared with mice deficient in either factor alone, and all GM-/-M-/ - mice have broncho- or lobar-pneumonia at death. These observations indicate that in vivo, M-CSF is involved in modulating the consequences of GM-CSF deficiency in the lung. Interestingly, GM-/-M-/- mice have circulating monocytes at levels comparable with those in M-CSF-deficient mice and the diseased lungs of all GM-/-M-/- mice contain numerous phagocytically active macrophages, indicating that in addition to GM-CSF and M-CSF, other factors can be used for macrophage production and function in vivo. © 1994 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Lieschke, G. J., Stanley, E., Grail, D., Hodgson, G., Sinickas, V., Gall, J. A. M., … Dunn, A. R. (1994). Mice lacking both macrophage- and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor have macrophages and coexistent osteopetrosis and severe lung disease. Blood, 84(1), 27–35. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v84.1.27.bloodjournal84127

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