4.6 Review

Priming of the neutrophil respiratory burst: role in host defense and inflammation

Journal

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 273, Issue 1, Pages 180-193

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/imr.12447

Keywords

neutrophils; NADPH oxidase/NOX2; priming; superoxide/ROS-production

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Funding

  1. Institut national de sante et de la recherche medicale (INSERM)
  2. le centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Universite Paris Diderot, le labex Inflamex, l'association Vaincre la mucoviscidose (VLM) et le DHU-Fire

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Neutrophils are the major circulating white blood cells in humans. They play an essential role in host defense against pathogens. In healthy individuals, circulating neutrophils are in a dormant state with very low efficiency of capture and arrest on the quiescent endothelium. Upon infection and subsequent release of pro-inflammatory mediators, the vascular endothelium signals to circulating neutrophils to roll, adhere, and cross the endothelial barrier. Neutrophils migrate toward the infection site along a gradient of chemo-attractants, then recognize and engulf the pathogen. To kill this pathogen entrapped inside the vacuole, neutrophils produce and release high quantities of antibacterial peptides, proteases, and reactive oxygen species (ROS). The robust ROS production is also called 'the respiratory burst', and the NADPH oxidase or NOX2 is the enzyme responsible for the production of superoxide anion, leading to other ROS. In vitro, several soluble and particulate agonists induce neutrophil ROS production. This process can be enhanced by prior neutrophil treatment with 'priming' agents, which alone do not induce a respiratory burst. In this review, we will describe the priming process and discuss the beneficial role of controlled neutrophil priming in host defense and the detrimental effect of excessive neutrophil priming in inflammatory diseases.

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