Significance
Macrophages—cells crucially involved in defense against infections—exhibit, depending on their anatomical location, distinct biological properties. Studies of the underlying mechanisms are of scientific and clinical interest, but are hampered by the difficulty of obtaining primary tissue macrophages in sufficient numbers and purity. Here, we report the generation of nontransformed murine macrophages, which are similar to alveolar macrophages and can be grown continuously without change of phenotype and in unlimited amounts. Such macrophages helped us to recognize several innate immune properties of alveolar macrophages that are involved in the pathogenesis of infectious lung inflammation.
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