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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Peculiarities of cell death mechanisms in neutrophils.

Barbara Geering, +1 more
- 01 Sep 2011 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 9, pp 1457-1469
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TLDR
The current and emerging models of neutrophil cell death mechanisms are reviewed with a focus on neutrophils peculiarities, including mitochondrial death pathway, and pharmacological intervention of inflammation.
Abstract
Analyses of neutrophil death mechanisms have revealed many similarities with other cell types; however, a few important molecular features make these cells unique executors of cell death mechanisms. For instance, in order to fight invading pathogens, neutrophils possess a potent machinery to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS), the phagocyte nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase. Evidence is emerging that these ROS are crucial in the execution of most neutrophil cell death mechanisms. Likewise, neutrophils exhibit many diverse granules that are packed with cytotoxic mediators. Of those, cathepsins were recently shown to activate pro-apoptotic B-cell lymphoma-2 (Bcl-2) family members and caspases, thus acting on apoptosis regulators. Moreover, neutrophils have few mitochondria, which hardly participate in ATP synthesis, as neutrophils gain energy from glycolysis. In spite of relatively low levels of cytochrome c in these cells, the mitochondrial death pathway is functional. In addition to these pecularities defining neutrophil death pathways, neutrophils are terminally differentiated cells, hence they do not divide but undergo apoptosis shortly after maturation. The initial trigger of this spontaneous apoptosis remains to be determined, but may result from low transcription and translation activities in mature neutrophils. Due to the unique biological characteristics of neutrophils, pharmacological intervention of inflammation has revealed unexpected and sometimes disappointing results when neutrophils were among the prime target cells during therapy. In this study, we review the current and emerging models of neutrophil cell death mechanisms with a focus on neutrophil peculiarities.

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Diverse novel functions of neutrophils in immunity, inflammation, and beyond

TL;DR: Novel findings on versatile functions of neutrophils are summarized, which appear to be related to their unique ability to release neutrophil extracellular traps even in the absence of pathogens.
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ROS production in phagocytes: why, when, and where?

TL;DR: Examples of local ROS production, decreased degradation, signaling events, and potentially ROS‐sensitive functions are presented and the current limitations for quantitative spatiotemporal ROS detection are illustrated.
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Clearance of apoptotic neutrophils and resolution of inflammation

TL;DR: This review will highlight how the engulfment of apoptotic neutrophils by human phagocytes occurs, how heterogeneity of phagocyte populations influences efferocytosis signaling, and downstream consequences of effercytosis.
References
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Journal Article

Tumor necrosis factor as an activator of human granulocytes. Potentiation of the metabolisms triggered by the Ca2+-mobilizing agonists.

TL;DR: It is found that neither Ca2+ mobilization nor membrane depolarization is required for TNF-receptor-mediated cell activation, and the diverse effects of TNF could be partly explained by the exclusive potentiation by TNF of the metabolic events triggered by an increase in [Ca2+]i.
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Modulation of Human Neutrophil Apoptosis by Immune Complexes

TL;DR: The results suggest that IC may also affect the course of inflammation by virtue of their ability to modulate neutrophil apoptosis.
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Regulation of neutrophil apoptosis via death receptors.

TL;DR: This review summarises current knowledge about the regulation of neutrophil apoptosis via death receptors, the molecular components involved in signalling and potential therapeutic targets that are based on death receptors or their signalling pathways.
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Separation of human neutrophil plasma membrane from intracellular vesicles containing alkaline phosphatase and NADPH oxidase activity by free flow electrophoresis.

TL;DR: The majority of membrane-bound NADPH oxidase components of light membranes of human neutrophils colocalize with secretory vesicles, and superoxide generating capacity induced by sodium dodecyl sulfate and cytosol, an entity traditionally ascribed to the plasma membrane, was largely confined to fractions containing secretoryVesicles.
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In vivo regulation of rat neutrophil apoptosis occurring spontaneously or induced with TNF-alpha or cycloheximide.

TL;DR: In this paper, spontaneous, recombinant human and mouse TNF-alpha- or cycloheximide-induced apoptosis of normal peripheral blood neutrophils (PBN), PBN from rats injected with proteose peptone or a streptococcus preparation, OK-432 (inflammatory PBN), peritoneally exudated neutrophili (PEN) obtained after a proteose- peptone injection, and normal bone marrow neutrophil.
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