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The Neutrophil

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 54, Issue 7, Pages 1377-1391

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2021.06.006

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Neutrophils are immune cells with potent antimicrobial properties, capable of efficiently killing microorganisms both intracellularly and extracellularly. In addition to fighting infections, they can use their toxic machinery in other contexts such as cancer. However, inappropriate or dysregulated activation of neutrophils can lead to host damage and contribute to autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.
Neutrophils are immune cells with unusual biological features that furnish potent antimicrobial properties. These cells phagocytose and subsequently kill prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms very efficiently. Importantly, it is not only their ability to attack microbes within a constrained intracellular compartment that endows neutrophils with antimicrobial function. They can unleash their effectors into the extracellular space, where, even post-mortem, their killing machinery can endure and remain functional. The antimicrobial activity of neutrophils must not be misconstrued as being microbe specific and should be viewed more generally as biotoxic. Outside of fighting infections, neutrophils can harness their noxious machinery in other contexts, like cancer. Inappropriate or dysregulated neutrophil activation damages the host and contributes to autoimmune and inflammatory disease. Here we review a number of topics related to neutrophil biology based on contemporary findings.

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