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Microbes and the fate of neutrophils

Journal

IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 314, Issue 1, Pages 210-228

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/imr.13163

Keywords

apoptosis; bacteria; cytolysis; granulopoiesis; neutrophil turnover; phagocytosis

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Neutrophils are an important component of innate host defense, with a high production rate and rapid mobilization to infected tissues. They contain abundant antimicrobial molecules, but their turnover and activation are tightly regulated. Microbial pathogens can affect the apoptosis and cytolysis of neutrophils, altering their function.
Neutrophils or polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) are an important component of innate host defense. These phagocytic leukocytes are recruited to infected tissues and kill invading microbes. There are several general characteristics of neutrophils that make them highly effective as antimicrobial cells. First, there is tremendous daily production and turnover of granulocytes in healthy adults-typically 10(11) per day. The vast majority (similar to 95%) of these cells are neutrophils. In addition, neutrophils are mobilized rapidly in response to chemotactic factors and are among the first leukocytes recruited to infected tissues. Most notably, neutrophils contain and/or produce an abundance of antimicrobial molecules. Many of these antimicrobial molecules are toxic to host cells and can destroy host tissues. Thus, neutrophil activation and turnover are highly regulated processes. To that end, aged neutrophils undergo apoptosis constitutively, a process that contains antimicrobial function and proinflammatory capacity. Importantly, apoptosis facilitates nonphlogistic turnover of neutrophils and removal by macrophages. This homeostatic process is altered by interaction with microbes and their products, as well as host proinflammatory molecules. Microbial pathogens can delay neutrophil apoptosis, accelerate apoptosis following phagocytosis, or cause neutrophil cytolysis. Here, we review these processes and provide perspective on recent studies that have potential to impact this paradigm.

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