| Literature DB >> 32630520 |
Leonie Fingerhut1,2,3, Gaby Dolz4, Nicole de Buhr1,2.
Abstract
Over the years of evolution, thousands of different animal species have evolved. All these species require an immune system to defend themselves against invading pathogens. Nevertheless, the immune systems of different species are obviously counteracting against the same pathogen with different efficiency. Therefore, the question arises if the process that was leading to the clades of vertebrates in the animal kingdom-namely mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles, and fish-was also leading to different functions of immune cells. One cell type of the innate immune system that is transmigrating as first line of defense in infected tissue and counteracts against pathogens is the neutrophil granulocyte. During the host-pathogen interaction they can undergo phagocytosis, apoptosis, degranulation, and form neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). In this review, we summarize a wide spectrum of information about neutrophils in humans and animals, with a focus on vertebrates. Special attention is kept on the development, morphology, composition, and functions of these cells, but also on dysfunctions and options for cell culture or storage.Entities:
Keywords: granulocyte; neutrophil; species
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32630520 PMCID: PMC7350212 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21124523
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Evolution of neutrophils/heterophils.
Leukocyte and neutrophil/heterophil values in different species.
| Species | Leukocytes 1 | Neutrophils/Heterophils 1 | Neutrophils/Heterophils 2 | Band Neutrophils/Heterophils 1 | Segmented Neutrophils/Heterophils 1 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | 3–11 | 1.71–8.25 | 57–75 | 0.5–0.77 | 1.35–8.1 | [ |
| Mouse | 2–12 | 0.4–3.6 | 20–30 | − | − | [ |
| Rat | 2–25 | 2.4–9.5 | 12–38 | − | − | [ |
| Horse | 3.5–12.1 | 1.58–8.47 | 45–70 | <0.6 | 1.6–8.5 | [ |
| Cattle | 4–13.3 | 0.6–6.65 | 15–50 | 0–0.2 | 0.6–6 | [ |
| Pig | 10–22 | 1–10.34 | 10–47 | 0–0.88 | 2–15 | [ |
| Dog | 5–17 | 2.75–14.45 | 55–85 | 0–0.45 | 2.9–12 | [ |
| Cat | 5.5–19.5 | 2.48–15.21 | 45–78 | 0–0.3 | 2.5–12.5 | [ |
| Chicken | 20–30 | 5–15 | 25–50 | − | − | [ |
| Budgerigar | 3–8 | 1.29–5.92 | 43–74 | 0 | 1.3–5.9 | [ |
| Turtle | 1–14 | 0.21–10.36 | 21–74 | − | − | [ |
| Snake | 1–50 | 0.02–21 | 2–42 | − | − | [ |
| Opossum | 3.9–12.6 | 0.55–6.3 | 14–50 | Rare | 0.5–6.3 | [ |
| Fish | 30–100 | 0.9–10 | 3–10 | − | − | [ |
1 in 103/µL; 2 in % of all leukocytes; (− = unknown). The values of neutrophils and heterophils in 103/µL were calculated with the values from the references for % of all leukocytes and the leukocyte values in 103/µL, if not already available in the cited reference.
Figure 2Morphology of neutrophils and heterophils of distinct species. Blood smears were captured after HAEMA fast stain with a Zeiss Axio Imager M2 microscope and all were taken with a 100× objective (Appendix A). The black square (0.6 × 0.6 cm) was cut out and size was doubled to enlarge the cytoplasm and parts of the nucleus. (a) Human, (b) Geoffroy’s spider monkey, (c) Mantled howler monkey, (d) Sloth, (e) Cow, (f) Pig, (g) Horse, (h) Skunk, (i) Dog, (j) Cat, (k) Squirrel, (l) Common opossum, (m) Mouse, (n) Pauraque, (o) Woodpecker, (p) Ara, (q) Guatemalan screech-owl, (r) Common snipe, (s) Boa, (t) Iguana, (u) Common snapping turtle, (v) Painted wood turtle.
Figure 3Neutrophil and heterophil sizes in different wild animals. The sizes of 10 neutrophils or heterophils in blood smears (Appendix A) of one blood donor of each species were measured, to get an impression of how the size varies between species. The sizes are given in mean ± standard deviation. In comparison, literature values of domestic animals range from 11 µm in rats, 10–13 µm in birds, and 12–15 µm in cattle [1]. Human neutrophils are described with a size of 7–12 µm [46,75].
Figure 4Morphology of neutrophils from male and female mantled howler monkeys is presented. Blood smears were captured after HAEMA fast stain with a Zeiss Axio Imager M2 microscope (Appendix A). Arrows show in (a) drumstick form, (b) sessile nodules form, (c) tag-like form, and (d) hock-like form.
Figure 5Diversity of nuclei from neutrophils and heterophils of distinct species is presented with four example pictures. Blood smears were captured after HAEMA fast stain with a Zeiss Axio Imager M2 microscope and all were taken with a 100× objective (Appendix A). Then 4 cm squares were cut out and the size doubled.
Selected granule components of neutrophils/heterophils in different species.
| Human | Mouse | Rat | Horse | Cattle | Pig | Dog | Cat | Birds | Reptiles | Opossum | Fish | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPO 1 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | +/− | [ |
| Lysozyme | + | + | + | + | − | + | + | − | + | + | (+) | (+) | [ |
| AP 2 | + | − | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | +/− | (0) | +/− | [ |
| Lactoferrin | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | − | [ |
| β-Glucuronidase | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | (0) | +/- | [ |
| Defensin | + | − | + | − | + | (+) | (+) | (+) | + | +/− | (+) | (+) | [ |
| MP 3 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | (0) | + | (0) | (0) | + | [ |
| Elastase | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | (0) | + | + | [ |
| BPI 4 | + | + | + | (+) | + | + | (+) | (+) | (+) | (+) | (0) | + | [ |
| Cathelicidin | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | (+) | (+) | [ |
1 Myeloperoxidase, 2 Alkaline phosphatase, 3 Metalloproteinases (gelatinase, leukolysin and/or collagenase), 4 Bactericidal permeability increasing protein, +/- present in some species, (+) sequence in genome but not stated if present in neutrophil, (0) no data found.
Figure 6Overview of neutrophil and heterophil functions to counteract infections. After infection of tissue, neutrophils and heterophils are attracted by chemokines to cross cell layers and afterwards to counteract against microbes. Different mechanisms after migration are found in neutrophils and heterophils. If no notable differences are described after transmigration (square), only the mechanism for the neutrophil is shown, which looks the same for the heterophil. MPO = myeloperoxidase, NE = neutrophil elastase, PAMPs = pathogen-associated molecular patterns, ROS = reactive oxygen species.
Selected diseases in which neutrophils/heterophils are involved.
| Disease | Pathogen/Mutation | Effect on Neutrophil | Clinical Signs | Affected Species | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anaplasmosis |
| Restricted movement, phagocytosis, superoxide production, adherence, transmigration, apoptosis | Unspecific, fever, impaired consciousness, lameness, arthritis, organ and lymph node swelling | Dogs, humans, ruminants, horses, wildlife, rodents, etc. | [ |
| Chlamydiosis |
| Paralysis: no activation, NETosis oxidative burst, reduced cell death | Often asymptomatic, conjunctivitis, genital infection, infertility | Humans | [ |
| Leishmaniosis/Brucellosis/Chlamydiosis |
| Trojan horse: induce apoptosis to reach macrophages | Cutaneous nodules and ulcers/abortion, inflammation/pneumonia, arthritis | Humans, rodents, birds, dogs/cattle, humans, other mammals, birds/humans, horses, reptiles, amphibians, marsupials | [ |
| Leukocyte adhesion deficiency | CD18 | Impaired adhesion and phagocytosis, normal morphology | Recurrent infections, sepsis, impaired wound healing, severe neutrophilia, often lethal | Humans, cattle (Holstein), dogs (Irish Setter), mice | [ |
| Chédiak-Higashi syndrome | LYST (lysosomal trafficking regulator) | Disturbed formation of phagolysosome, fusion of granules (giant and pink) | Infections, partial oculocutaneous albinism, hemorrhage | Humans, cattle, cats (Persian), mice (beige), arctic foxes, mink, killer whale | [ |
| Mucopoly-saccharidosis | Enzymes in mucopolysaccharide catabolism | Normal function, accumulation of metabolic byproducts → large azurophilic granules | Bone and cartilage defects, hepatomegaly | Humans, cattle, cats, dogs | [ |
| Chronic granulomatous disease | NADPH oxidase | Defects in respiratory burst | Recurrent severe but not fatal infections, granulomas | Humans, dogs (Doberman Pinscher) | [ |
| MPO deficiency | Myeloperoxidase | Delayed killing | Few clinical signs, recurrent fungal infection | Humans, dogs (Gray Collie) | [ |
| Cyclic hematopoiesis | Neutrophil elastase (human), adaptor protein complex 3 (dog) | Mis-trafficking of neutrophil elastase | Severe cyclic neutropenia, bleeding, recurrent infections, coat color dilution, amyloidosis, often lethal | Humans, dogs | [ |
| Pelger–Huët anomaly | Lamin B receptor | Hypolobulated nucleus | Heterozygote no signs, homozygote: skeletal deformation, susceptible to infections, usually lethal | Humans, horses, dogs, cats, rabbits, mice | [ |
Human neutrophil cell lines.
| HL-60 | NB4 | PLB-985 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Donor | 36-year-old woman | 23-year-old woman | Subclone of HL-60, with some differences in gene expression |
| Disease | Acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML-M2) | Acute promyelocytic leukemia in second relapse (AML-M3) | Acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML-M2) |
| Tissue origin | Peripheral blood | Bone marrow | HL-60 |
| Cell type | Myeloblast | Promyelocyte | Myeloblast |
| Inducible cell types | Monocytes, macrophages, eosinophils, neutrophils | Macrophages, neutrophils | Monocytes, granulocytes |
| Differentiation towards neutrophils with (e.g.) | All-trans retinoic acid, DMSO, dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (dbcAMP), hypoxanthine, Nutridoma | All-trans retinoic acid, DMSO, dbcAMP | All-trans retinoic acid, DMSO, dbcAMP, Nutridoma |
| Doubling time | 40 h | 35–45 h | 30 h |
| Cytogenetics | t(8;21) | t(15;17) | − |
| Cathelicidin expression (LL-37) | No | No | Not known |
| Advantages | Inducible respiratory burst, phagocytosis and NET formation (however, all less than in primary neutrophils) | Similar characteristics to HL-60, expression of secondary granules inducible | |
| Disadvantages | No secondary granules, failure in chemotaxis, deficient expression of late neutrophil-specific genes | Similar characteristics to HL-60 | |
| Pathogen interaction (e.g., | Infection level, reduction in defense gene transcription and oxidative burst similar to PMNs | No sufficient infection | Low infection level, minimal change in defense gene transcription and oxidative burst |
| References | [ | [ | [ |