| Literature DB >> 28149530 |
Gretchen S Selders1, Allison E Fetz1, Marko Z Radic2, Gary L Bowlin1.
Abstract
Despite considerable recent progress in defining neutrophil functions and behaviors in tissue repair, much remains to be determined with regards to its overall role in the tissue integration of biomaterials. This article provides an overview of the neutrophil's numerous, important roles in both inflammation and resolution, and subsequently, their role in biomaterial integration. Neutrophils function in three primary capacities: generation of oxidative bursts, release of granules and formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs); these combined functions enable neutrophil involvement in inflammation, macrophage recruitment, M2 macrophage differentiation, resolution of inflammation, angiogenesis, tumor formation and immune system activation. Neutrophils exhibit great flexibility to adjust to the prevalent microenvironmental conditions in the tissue; thus, the biomaterial composition and fabrication will potentially influence neutrophil behavior following confrontation. This review serves to highlight the neutrophil's plasticity, reiterating that neutrophils are not just simple suicidal killers, but the true maestros of resolution and regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: NETosis; host response; inflammation; neutrophil; tissue engineering; tissue regeneration
Year: 2017 PMID: 28149530 PMCID: PMC5274707 DOI: 10.1093/rb/rbw041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Regen Biomater ISSN: 2056-3426
Neutrophil granules and their factors of interest. Chemokine production and secretion play a significant role in cellular migration, wound healing, hematopoiesis, angiogenesis, and tumor metastasis, all critical to the neutrophil’s function [4]
| Granule | Factor of Interest | Function | Role in Immune System Guided |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | NE | Degrades collagen-IV and elastin within ECM [ | Positive feedback loop for the inflammatory response [ |
| Targets bacteria’s virulent vectors [ | |||
| Up-regulates expression of TLR 4 expression in monocytes [ | |||
| Tissue remodeling [ | |||
| Defensins | Disrupts cytoplasmic membrane of microbes and induces migration of naïve T cells and immature DCs [ | Active adaptive immunity to combat infection [D. | |
| Induces chemotaxis of CD4+ and CD8+ cells ( | Links innate and adaptive immunity through the neutrophil ( | ||
| MPO | Production of antimicrobial oxidants [ | Facilitates NET release [ | |
| Enables translocation of NE to the nucleus [ | |||
| Reacts with H2O2 which increases toxic potential by inducing the formation of hypochlorous acid (chlorination products, tyrosine radicals and reactive nitrogen intermediates) [ | |||
| Lysozyme | Cleaves peptidoglycan polymers of bacterial cell walls [ | ||
| Bactericidal/permeability increasing protein (BPI) | Kills gram-negative bacteria at non-molar concentrations by binding to negatively charged residues of LPS which promotes bacterial attachment and allows for phagocytosis [ | ||
| Endotoxin-neutralizing proteins [ | |||
| Proteinase 3 | Induces activation of epithelial cells, endothelial cells, macrophages, lymphocytes, and platelets [ | ||
| Cathepsin G | Kills pathogens [ | Tissue remodeling [ | |
| Degrades ECM proteins [ | |||
| Induces activation of epithelial cells, endothelial cells, macrophages, lymphocytes, and platelets [ | |||
| Azurocidin | Induces chemotaxis of CD4+ and CD8+ cells [ | ||
| Antimicrobial activity [ | |||
| Vitronectin | Promotes neutrophil adhesion and migration through interaction with integrins [ | ||
| Inhibits apoptosis of neutrophils [ | |||
| Secondary | Lactoferrin | Wide range of microbicidal activity against pathogens ( | |
| N-terminal amphipathic α-helical region [ | |||
| Iron-binding proteins and impairs bacterial growth (gram − and +) by sequestration of iron [ | |||
| Collagenase (MMP-1 and MMP-8) | Degrades major structural components of ECM [ | MMP-8 has been deemed a tumor-protective protein, possibly to be an anti-tumor agent against MMP-9 [ | |
| Responsible for loss of vascular basement membranes during neutrophil extravasation and migration [ | |||
| M-Ficolin | Interacts with microbial entities and activates the lectin pathway of the complement cascade [ | ||
| Neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin | Antibacterial activity through sequestration of ferric-siderophore complexes [ | Is produced commonly by neutrophils in normal, inflamed, and neotissue [ | |
| Strongest iron chelators known [ | Plays a role in iron-depleting strategy affecting bacterial growth [ | ||
| Human cathelicidin antimicrobial protein-18 (hCAP-18) | Antimicrobial peptide (−/+), induces chemotaxis of neutrophils, T cells and monocytes when isolated from cathelin propiece [ | During wound healing, insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) induces secretion of hCAP-18 in keratinocytes and hCAP-18 is constitutively expressed in monocytes and lymphocytes elsewhere [ | |
| Flavocytochrome b558 | Terminal electron carrier of the assembled respiratory burst oxidase [ | ||
| Lysozyme | Binds LPS and reduces cytokine production [ | ||
| Bactericidal activity against non-pathogenic bacteria [ | |||
| Secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor (SLPI) | Neutralizes elastase and cathepsin G., activates MMPs, inhibits macrophage MMPs and tumorigenesis; absence of SLPI associated with reduced ECM production and poor healing [ | ||
| Pentraxin 3 | Antimicrobial properties [ | Stimulated by LPS, neutrophil activation etc. and can continue to be released in response to inflammatory cytokines [ | |
| Microbial recognition [ | |||
| NADPH oxidase | Aids respiratory burst upon neutrophil activation and subsequent ROS production/release [ | ||
| Leukolysin (MMP-25) (10% of total leukolysin present in cell) | Degrades major structural components of ECM [ | ||
| Loss of vascular basement membranes during neutrophil extravasation and migration [ | |||
| Tertiary | Gelatinases A and B (MMP- 2 and MMP-9) | Degrades major structural components of ECM [ | Inhibition of gelatinases results in suppressed neutrophil attachment and migration [ |
| Loss of vascular basement membranes during neutrophil extravasation and migration [ | Excessive amounts of MMP-9, potent stimulator of angiogenesis, seen in N2 neutrophils plays a role in invasive tumor growth [ | ||
| Tissue remodeling [ | |||
| Flavocytochrome b558 | Terminal electron carrier of the assembled respiratory burst oxidase [ | ||
| Arginase-1 | Inhibits T cell proliferation [ | Lack of Arginase-1 is associated with reduced healing, inflammation, increased collagen deposition and mast cell migration [ | |
| Leukolysin (MMP-25) (40% of total leukolysin present in cell) | Degrades major structural components of ECM [ | Allows for neutrophil migration and matrix reprogramming | |
| Loss of vascular basement membranes during neutrophil extravasation and migration [ | |||
| Secretory Vesicles | β2-integrin CD11b/CD18 (Mac-1, CR3) | Promotes apoptosis of neutrophils [ | When mobilized, there is a shedding of L-selectin from neutrophil’s surface which allows for neutrophil firm contact with the vascular endothelium |
| Increased apoptosis of neutrophils can lead to resolution of inflammation [ | |||
| Formylated bacterial peptides (fMLP-receptors) | G-PCR | In LPS stimulated neutrophils, fMLP can inhibit TNF-α providing an anti-inflammatory effect on monocytes and macrophages [ | |
| Pro-inflammatory agent [ |
Figure 1.Neutrophil crosstalk with immune and humoral cells and relevant chemical signals that influence and compose the inflammatory response and pathway to resolution via the neutrophil.
Figure 2.Schematic of the neutrophil undergoing NETosis.
Figure 3.Scanning electron micrograph (scale bar represents 1 µm) of NETs trapping/entangling pathogens [22]. Reprinted with permission from original publisher. © 2012 Brinkmann and Zychlinksy. Journal of Cell Biology. 198:773-783,doi:10.1083/jcb.201203170.
Figure 4.Schematic relays the distinct differences between N1 (anti-tumoral) and N2 (pro-tumoral) neutrophils.
Figure 5.Representative fluorescent images of freshly isolated neutrophils seeded onto polydioxanone electrospun templates at 3 hrs. Top panel a is a large fiber diameter (1.9 ± 1 µm) template while bottom panel B shows a small fiber diameter (0.3 ± 0.1 µm) template eliciting a greater amount of NET extrusion. The stains utilized are DAPI (blue) for nuclei and SYTOX green (green) for extracellular chromatin, or NETs. For both images, magnification is 40× and scale bar is 50 µm.