Neutrophil secretion products pave the way for inflammatory monocytes.
Soehnlein. Oliver O; Zernecke. Alma A; Eriksson. Einar E EE; Rothfuchs. Antonio Gigliotti AG; Pham. Christine T CT; Herwald. Heiko H; Bidzhekov. Kiril K; Rottenberg. Martin E ME; Weber. Christian C; Lindbom. Lennart L
Key Findings
- Neutrophil-derived LL-37 and heparin‑binding protein directly activate inflammatory monocytes via formyl‑peptide receptors.
- Depleting neutrophils reduces the influx of inflammatory monocytes, but adding back their secretions restores it.
- The enhanced monocyte response leads to higher cytokine levels and better bacterial clearance in mouse models.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, the study suggests that boosting LL-37 activity could be a way to strengthen early immune defenses. However, the work is limited to mice and does not provide dosage, safety, or human data, so any attempts to modulate LL-37 should be approached cautiously and are not ready for direct implementation.
Summary
In mice, a protein called LL-37 released by neutrophils (a type of white blood cell) helps pull in a second wave of immune cells called inflammatory monocytes. This recruitment boosts overall inflammation signals and improves the body's ability to clear bacteria.
Abstract
The leukocyte response in inflammation is characterized by an initial recruitment of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) preceding a second wave of monocytes to the site of injury or infection. In the mouse, 2 populations of monocytes have been identified, Gr1(-)CCR2(-)CX3CR1(hi) resident monocytes and Gr1(+)CCR2(+)CX3CR1(lo) inflammatory monocytes. Here, intravital microscopy of the musculus cremaster and a subcutaneous air pouch model were used to investigate a possible link between PMN extravasation and the subsequent emigration of inflammatory monocytes in response to local stimulation with PAF. In mice that were made neutropenic by injection of a PMN-depleting antibody, the extravasation of inflammatory monocytes, but not resident monocytes, was markedly reduced compared with mice with intact white blood cell count but was restored by local treatment with secretion of activated PMN. Components of the PMN secretion were found to directly activate inflammatory monocytes and further examination revealed PMN-derived LL-37 and heparin-binding protein (HBP/CAP37/azurocidin) as primary mediators of the recruitment of inflammatory monocytes via activation of formyl-peptide receptors. These data show that LL-37 and HBP specifically stimulate mobilization of inflammatory monocytes. This cellular cross-talk functionally results in enhanced cytokine levels and increased bacterial clearance, thus boosting the early immune response.
Study Information
pubmed
2008
2008-05-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1182/blood-2008-02-139634
429
62