4.6 Review

Neutrophils in pregnancy: New insights into innate and adaptive immune regulation

Journal

IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 164, Issue 4, Pages 665-676

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imm.13392

Keywords

neutrophils; pregnancy; T cells

Categories

Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation Fellowship [FS/17/1/32528]

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The immunology of pregnancy focuses on how the mother tolerates the semi-allogeneic fetus, involving a balance of immune cells between pro-inflammatory functions and immunosuppressive activity depending on gestation time. Neutrophils at the maternal-fetal interface play a role in pregnancy, but their functions and interactions with T cells remain largely unknown.
The immunology of pregnancy has been the focus of many studies to better understand how the mother is able to tolerate the presence of a semi-allogeneic fetus. Far from the initial view of pregnancy as a state of immunosuppression, successful fetal development from implantation to birth is now known to be under the control of an intricate balance of immune cells. The balance between pro-inflammatory functions used to promote embryo implantation and placental development and immunosuppressive activity to maintain maternal tolerance of the fetus is an immunological phenotype unique to pregnancy, which is dependent on the time of gestation. Neutrophils are one of a host of innate immune cells detected at the maternal-fetal interface, but very little is known of their function. In this review, we explore the emerging functions of neutrophils during pregnancy and their interactions with and regulation of T cells, a key adaptive immune cell population essential for the establishment of fetal-maternal tolerance.

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