Monocytes are recruited from the blood to sites of inflammation, where they contribute
to wound healing and tissue repair. There are at least two subsets of monocytes: classical
or proinflammatory (CCR2^{hi}CX_{3}CR1^{low}) and nonclassical, patrolling, or alternative
(CCR2^{low}CX_{3}CR1^{hi}) monocytes. Using spinning-disk confocal intravital microscopy and mice
with fluorescent reporters for each of these subsets, we were able to track the dynamic
spectrum of monocytes that enter a site of sterile hepatic injury in vivo. We observed that
the CCR2^{hi}CX_{3}CR1^{low} monocytes were recruited early and persisted for at least 48 h, forming
a ringlike structure around the injured area. These monocytes transitioned, in situ,
from CCR2^{hi}CX_{3}CR1^{low} to CX_{3}CR1^{hi}CCR2^{low} within the ringlike structure and then entered
the injury site. This phenotypic conversion was essential for optimal repair. These results
demonstrate a local, cytokine driven reprogramming of classic, proinflammatory monocytes
into nonclassical or alternative monocytes to facilitate proper wound-healing
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