Immune Cells Enhance Clearance of Bacteria
Immune Cells Enhance Clearance of Bacteria
Oliver Söhnlein and colleagues, at the Karolinska Institutet, Sweden, have identified a new function for a number of proteins secreted by human immune cells known as neutrophils or PMNs: they enhance the uptake of bacteria by other immune cells (known as macrophages) that are capable of destroying the microbes.
In the study, proteins secreted by human PMNs, specifically HBP and HNP1-3, were found to enhance the in vitro ability of human and mouse macrophages to take up bacteria coated in the immune molecule IgG. Mechanistically, HBP and HNP1-3 activated the macrophages to secrete soluble factors that, in turn, induced the macrophages to express proteins to which IgG can bind (CD32 and CD64). The authors therefore suggest that HBP and HNP1–3 secreted by PMNs have a role in clearing bacterial infections.
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