中性粒细胞胞外陷阱
髓过氧化物酶
生物材料
先天免疫系统
巨噬细胞
细胞生物学
中性粒细胞弹性蛋白酶
趋化因子
炎症
弹性蛋白酶
免疫系统
免疫学
体内
材料科学
化学
生物
体外
生物化学
酶
纳米技术
生物技术
作者
Lais Morandini,Derek Avery,Benjamin Angeles,Paul Winston,Rebecca Martin,Henry J. Donahue,René Olivares‐Navarrete
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.actbio.2023.05.016
摘要
Neutrophils are the most abundant immune cells in the blood and the first cells to be recruited to the biomaterial implantation site. Neutrophils are fundamental in recruiting mononuclear leukocytes to mount an immune response at the injury site. Neutrophils exert significant pro-inflammatory effects through the release of cytokines and chemokines, degranulation and release of myeloperoxidase (MPO) and neutrophil elastase (NE), and the production of large DNA-based networks called neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Neutrophils are initially recruited and activated by cytokines and pathogen- and damage-associated molecular patterns, but little is known about how the physicochemical composition of the biomaterial affects their activation. This study aimed to understand how ablating neutrophil mediators (MPO, NE, NETs) affected macrophage phenotype in vitro and osseointegration in vivo. We discovered that NET formation is a crucial mediator of pro-inflammatory macrophage activation, and inhibition of NET formation significantly suppresses macrophage pro-inflammatory phenotype. Furthermore, reducing NET formation accelerated the inflammatory phase of healing and produced greater bone formation around the implanted biomaterial, suggesting that NETs are essential regulators of biomaterial integration. Our findings emphasize the importance of the neutrophil response to implanted biomaterials and highlight innate immune cells' regulation and amplification signaling during the initiation and resolution of the inflammatory phase of biomaterial integration. Neutrophils are the most abundant immune cells in blood and are the first to be recruited to the injury/implantation site where they exert significant pro-inflammatory effects. This study aimed to understand how ablating neutrophil mediators affected macrophage phenotype in vitro and bone apposition in vivo. We found that NET formation is a crucial mediator of pro-inflammatory macrophage activation. Reducing NET formation accelerated the inflammatory phase of healing and produced greater appositional bone formation around the implanted biomaterial, suggesting that NETs are essential regulators of biomaterial integration.
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