作者
Michael Mihlan,Stefanie Wissmann,Alina Gavrilov,Lukas Kaltenbach,Marie Britz,Kristin Franke,Barbara Hummel,Andrea Imle,Ryo Suzuki,Manuel Stecher,Katharina M. Glaser,Axel Lorentz,Peter Carmeliet,Takehiko Yokomizo,Ingo Hilgendorf,Ritwick Sawarkar,Alba Diz-Muñoz,Joerg M. Buescher,Gerhard Mittler,Marcus Maurer,Karoline Krause,Magda Babina,Luise Erpenbeck,Marcus Frank,Angelika S. Rambold,Tim Lämmermann
摘要
Neutrophils are sentinel immune cells with essential roles for antimicrobial defense. Most of our knowledge on neutrophil tissue navigation derived from wounding and infection models, whereas allergic conditions remained largely neglected. Here, we analyzed allergen-challenged mouse tissues and discovered that degranulating mast cells (MCs) trap living neutrophils inside them. MCs release the attractant leukotriene B4 to re-route neutrophils toward them, thus exploiting a chemotactic system that neutrophils normally use for intercellular communication. After MC intracellular trap (MIT) formation, neutrophils die, but their undigested material remains inside MC vacuoles over days. MCs benefit from MIT formation, increasing their functional and metabolic fitness. Additionally, they are more pro-inflammatory and can exocytose active neutrophilic compounds with a time delay (nexocytosis), eliciting a type 1 interferon response in surrounding macrophages. Together, our study highlights neutrophil trapping and nexocytosis as MC-mediated processes, which may relay neutrophilic features over the course of chronic allergic inflammation.