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Priming and de-priming of neutrophil responses in vitro and in vivo.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Vogt, Katja L 
Summers, Charlotte 
Condliffe, Alison M  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6697-8648

Abstract

The activation status of neutrophils can cycle from basal through primed to fully activated ("green-amber-red"), and at least in vitro, primed cells can spontaneously revert to a near basal phenotype. This broad range of neutrophil responsiveness confers extensive functional flexibility, allowing neutrophils to respond rapidly and appropriately to varied and evolving threats throughout the body. Primed and activated cells display dramatically enhanced bactericidal capacity (including augmented respiratory burst activity, degranulation and longevity), but this enhancement also confers the capacity for significant unintended tissue injury. Neutrophil priming and its consequences have been associated with adverse outcomes in a range of disease states, hence understanding the signalling processes that regulate the transition between basal and primed states (and back again) may offer new opportunities for therapeutic intervention in pathological settings. A wide array of host- and pathogen-derived molecules is able to modulate the functional status of these versatile cells. Reflecting this extensive repertoire of potential mediators, priming can be established by a range of signalling pathways (including mitogen-activated protein kinases, phosphoinositide 3-kinases, phospholipase D and calcium transients) and intracellular processes (including endocytosis, vesicle trafficking and the engagement of adhesion molecules). The signalling pathways engaged, and the exact cellular phenotype that results, vary according to the priming agent(s) to which the neutrophil is exposed and the precise environmental context. Herein we describe the signals that establish priming (in particular for enhanced respiratory burst, degranulation and prolonged lifespan) and describe the recently recognised process of de-priming, correlating in vitro observations with in vivo significance.

Description

Keywords

de-priming, degranulation, neutrophils, priming, respiratory burst, signaling, Apoptosis, Cell Adhesion, Cell Degranulation, Cell Membrane, Humans, Neutrophil Activation, Neutrophils, Phospholipids, Phosphorylation, Reactive Oxygen Species, Signal Transduction

Journal Title

Eur J Clin Invest

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0014-2972
1365-2362

Volume Title

48 Suppl 2

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Asthma UK (08/011)
Wellcome Trust (074573/Z/04/Z)
Wellcome Trust (077940/Z/05/Z)
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) (unknown)
BMA Foundation for Medical Research (Josephine Lansdell Award)
Medical Research Council (MR/M012328/1)
The research in the authors laboratories is funded by the MRC (MR/M012328), MRC AMR (MRNO2995X/1), British Lung Foundation (PRG16-13), BMA Josephine Landsell Grant to Dr Katharine Lodge, Wellcome Trust, NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Gates-Cambridge Scholarship Programme, Addenbrooke’s Charitable Trust, NIH Oxford-Cambridge Scholarship Programme, Cancer Research UK, Wolfson Foundation and non-commercial grants from MedImmune, Bristol Myer Squibs and GlaxoSmithKline.