作者
José M. Adrover,Carlos del Fresno,Georgiana Crainiciuc,María Isabel Cuartero,María Casanova-Acebes,Linnea A. Weiss,Hector Huerga Encabo,Carlos Silvestre-Roig,Jan Rossaint,Itziar Cossío,Ana Victoria Lechuga‐Vieco,Jaime García‐Prieto,Mónica Gómez‐Parrizas,Juan A. Quintana,Iván Ballesteros,Sandra Martín-Salamanca,Alejandra Aroca-Crevillén,Shu Zhen Chong,Maximilien Evrard,Karl Balabanian,J. A. López,Kiril Bidzhekov,Françoise Bachelerie,Francisco Abad‐Santos,Cecilia Muñoz‐Calleja,Alexander Zarbock,Oliver Soehnlein,Christian Weber,Lai Guan Ng,Cristina López‐Rodríguez,David Sancho,Marı́a A. Moro,Borja Ibáñez,Andrés Hidalgo
摘要
(Immunity 50, 390–402.e1–e10; February 19, 2019) In the version of this paper originally published online, the labels on top of the plot in Figure 2C are swapped. “Aged” should be on the right (over the white area) and “Fresh” on the left (over the shaded area). These errors have been corrected online, and the authors apologize for the confusion.Figure 2CBma1, CXCR2, and CXCR4 Form a Diurnal Timer in Neutrophils, Related to Figure S2 (Original)View Large Image Figure ViewerDownload Hi-res image Download (PPT) A Neutrophil Timer Coordinates Immune Defense and Vascular ProtectionAdrover et al.ImmunityJanuary 29, 2019In BriefNeutrophils display circadian oscillations in numbers and phenotype in the circulation. Adrover and colleagues now identify the molecular regulators of neutrophil aging and show that genetic disruption of this process has major consequences in immune cell trafficking, anti-microbial defense, and vascular health. Full-Text PDF Open Archive