Resident arterial macrophages emerge during embryonic development. They retain expression of the precursor marker CX3C chemokine receptor (CX3CR)1 and specifically express Lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (Lyve1). Depending on the study, additional markers of this population were identified: mannose receptor MMR (Cd206), transcription factor Mafb
[10], Factor XIIIa (F13a1), Growth arrest-specific 6 (Gas6)
[8], and others. According to their tissue-resident subtype, these macrophages are identified both in normal and atherosclerotic areas of the aorta
[8], and they are predominately present in the adventitia. It is not clear whether migrating monocytes may acquire resident-like phenotype. Increased expression of Ccr2, a marker for recruited macrophages, may point to this possibility. Several studies described that resident-like macrophages can proliferate by showing either protein expression of proliferation marker Ki-67 or enrichment for cell cycle genes
[7]. Folr2, Cbr2, Sepp1 and Cd206 expressed by lesion resident-like cells are all associated with M2-like phenotype, suggesting anti-inflammatory characteristics of the population. There was no difference in the proportion of resident-like macrophages between progressive and regressive plaques
[7].
Different single-cell studies confirmed the presence of inflammatory macrophages in atherosclerotic lesions
[7] and were concordant in the description of this subset. It is enriched with transcripts of classical pro-inflammatory pathways (Il1α, Il1β, Tlr2, Tnf), chemokines (Ccl2–5, Cxcl1, Cxcl2, Cxcl10) and interferon I signaling genes. The relative frequency of the inflammatory macrophage subset positively correlates with plaque progression
[7]. A rather unexpected finding was the absence of association of inflammatory patterns with foam cell phenotype (discussed below). In contrast to resident-like population, the inflammatory population is absent in normal vessels, being present only in atherosclerotic lesions, where they represent the largest macrophage subset
[8]. They also differ in the localization, with predominant presence in the intima, including plaque shoulder regions
[7]. According to the transcriptional and functional profile, this population closely resemble classical M1 phenotype.
TREM2hi macrophages were identified exclusively in the plaques and not in the healthy aorta
[8]. TREM2 is a myeloid-specific transmembrane glycoprotein, that works as a lipid sensor, binding apolipoprotein E, glycerophospholipids, sphingomyelins. TREM2 was described as a marker of lipid-associated macrophages differentiated in obesity, driving gene expression program involved in phagocytosis, lipid catabolism and anti-inflammatory phenotype
[11]. According to current understanding, TREM2 pathway may represent a conserved macrophage response for detection of extracellular pathogenic lipids across multiple tissues
[11]. Pathway analysis of TREM2hi lesion macrophages showed connections with foam cell phenotype and enrichment in transcripts involved in cholesterol metabolism and oxidative phosphorylation
[7]. Foam cell characteristics of TREM2hi macrophages were confirmed by independent studies
[8][10]. This subset of cells resides in the intima, being involved in the uptake of atherogenic lipoproteins and lipid-rich core formation. Comparison of transcriptomic profiles of intimal foamy and non-foamy macrophages sorted from pooled atherosclerotic aortas of
ApoE−/− mice showed that inflammatory genes such as
I1b,
Nfkbia,
Tlr2, and
Tnf were mostly upregulated in non-foamy population, while foam cells were enriched in resolving/regression-related genes
[10]. The notice that foam cell formation is not a pro-inflammatory process is a recent ongoing paradigm shift in the atherosclerosis field, as several studies have previously shown clear pro-inflammatory characteristics of foam cell formation, which was, for a long time, regarded as a potential target for atherosclerosis treatment
[12]. Although foamy macrophages are anti-inflammatory with M2-like features, their accumulation positively correlates with the severity of atherosclerosis
[10].
Macrophage subsets defined by Fernandez et al.
[13] in human carotid endarterectomy specimens are close to murine classification discussed above. In contrast to murine models, in human plaques, macrophages were not the major population among CD45
+ cells, comprising less than 20%
[14][13]. The study described the same three populations of intraplaque macrophages
[13]. The CD206
hiCD163
hi macrophage subset may be similar to resident-like macrophage subset based on CD206 expression and absence of foam- cell patterns. The pro-inflammatory macrophages in human plaques expressed increased levels of activation markers, such as major histocompatibility complex class II DR alpha (HLA-DRA), CD74, cytochrome B-245 alpha chain (CYBA), lysozyme C-2 precursor (LYZ2), allograft inflammatory factor (AIF)1, S100A8/A9, metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript (MALAT)1, JUNB, NFKBIA. The foamy anti-inflammatory macrophage subset was enriched for the expression of LGALS3 (galectin 3 gene) and foam cell-related transcripts such as apolipoprotein C (APOC)1, APOE, cathepsin B (CTSB), FABP5 and perilipin 2 (PLIN2). TREM2 and CD9 expression in foamy subset was observed in another study, closely corresponding to the data from murine studies. Characteristics of foamy-like population also included the upregulation of metabolic pathways and liver X receptor/retinoid X receptor (LXR/RXR) activation, as well as STAT6-driven anti-inflammatory pathways
[14].
Macrophage transcriptional profiles may differ between patients with asymptomatic lesions (ASYM) and those having cerebrovascular complications (SYM)
[13]. ASYM macrophages were more activated, pro-inflammatory with high IL-1β signaling (IL-1β, IL-1RAP, NLRP3 expression) and displayed enhanced foam cell functions compared to SYM macrophages. In SYM plaques, macrophages expressed several genes associated with plaque instability: granzymes, CCL5, pro-angiogenic factors IL-8 and CXCR2, genes involved in Hedgehog and Wnt signaling. T cell-macrophage and macrophage- macrophage cell-to-cell communications were described that may be associated with ASYM and SYM plaques
[13].
Single-cell RNA-Seq was combined with genetic fate mapping of myeloid cells derived from CX3CR1
+ precursor monocytes to analyze the differences in transcriptional programs between progressing and regressing plaques in mice. Bone marrow chimeras of
ldlr–/– mice reconstituted with bone marrow from Cx3cr1CreERT2-IRES-YFP/+Rosa26fl-tdTomato/+ mice were used that allow to map all CX3CR1+ macrophages with tdTomato expression upon tamoxifen exposure. No significant difference in the overall number TdTomato+ cells from aortas of mice undergoing progression and regression was found, but regressing lesions were characterized by increased number of macrophages with M2 markers (PD-L2, CD301)
[15]. The cluster that resembled resident-like macrophages (Folr2hi macrophages) was the highest in both progressing and regressing lesions. There was a considerable heterogeneity of macrophage activation states under progression conditions possibly reflecting more complex polarizing environment. An interesting finding was the identification of a specific M2 subpopulation (Retnla
hiEar2
hi macrophages) in progressing plaques that was actually absent from regressing plaques, that challenged the idea of plaque progression as solely M1-driven process. A specific cluster of M2 polarized cells associated with regressive plaques was also identified, that expressed stabilin-1 (Stab1) and selenoprotein-1 (Sepp1), proteins with efferocytosis-enhancing and anti-inflammatory activities. A cluster of proliferating CX3CR1
+ cells with stem cell–like signature expressing markers of both monocytes and macrophages was described. This fact broadens our view of the origin of proliferating macrophages within the plaque
[15].