4.7 Article

LPS Induces Opposing Memory-like Inflammatory Responses in Mouse Bone Marrow Neutrophils

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22189803

Keywords

neutrophils; LPS; priming; trained sensitivity; tolerance; migration; phagocytosis

Funding

  1. PRIMAL consortium - Federal Ministry for Education and Research (Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung, BMBF) [01GL1746E]

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Studies have shown that neutrophils can exhibit trained immunity and tolerance. Through in vivo and in vitro experiments, researchers found that different doses of lipopolysaccharide can lead to varying effects, potentially related to inflammatory responses.
A growing body of evidence suggests that innate immune cells can respond in a memory-like (adaptive) fashion, which is referred to as trained immunity. Only few in vivo studies have shown training effects in neutrophils; however, no in vitro setup has been established to study the induction of trained immunity or tolerance in neutrophils by microbial agents. In light of their short lifespan (up to 48 h), we suggest to use the term trained sensitivity for neutrophils in an in vitro setting. Here, we firstly describe a feasible two-hit model, using different doses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in bone marrow neutrophils. We found that low doses (10 pg/mL) induce pro-inflammatory activation (trained sensitivity), whereas priming with high doses (100 ng/mL) leads to suppression of pro-inflammatory mediators such as TNF-alpha or IL-6 (tolerance) (p < 0.05). On a functional level, trained neutrophils displayed increased phagocytic activity and LFA-1 expression as well as migrational capacity and CD11a expression, whereas tolerant neutrophils show contrasting effects in vitro. Mechanistically, TLR4/MyD88/PI3Ks regulate the activation of p65, which controls memory-like responses in mouse bone marrow neutrophils (p < 0.05). Our results open a new window for further in vitro studies on memory-like inflammatory responses of short-lived innate immune cells such as neutrophils.

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