نتایج جستجو برای: neutrophil extracellular traps nets

تعداد نتایج: 195658  

2015
Daniel Sousa-Rocha Mariana Thomaz-Tobias Larissa Figueiredo Alves Diniz Priscila Silva Sampaio Souza Phileno Pinge-Filho Karina Alves Toledo Nades Palaniyar

Neutrophils release fibrous traps of DNA, histones, and granule proteins known as neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), which contribute to microbicidal killing and have been implicated in autoimmunity. The role of NET formation in the host response to nonbacterial pathogens is not well-understood. In this study, we investigated the release of NETs by human neutrophils upon their interaction w...

2016
Giuseppe A. Ramirez Angelo A. Manfredi Patrizia Rovere-Querini Norma Maugeri

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) comprise neutrophil DNA, citrullinated (deiminated) histones, and proteases (1, 2). NET formation in vivo mostly occurs at the sites of inflammation. Neutrophils, adhering to the endothelium or after extravasation, generate NETs upon interaction with microbes, activated platelets, cytokines, alarmins, such as high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), or uric acid....

2010
Christelle Gabriel Robert W McMaster Denis Girard Albert Descoteaux

Upon their recruitment to a site of infection and their subsequent activation, neutrophils release DNA and a subset of their granule content to form filamentous structures, known as neutrophil extracellular traps, which capture and kill microorganisms. In this study, we show that Leishmania promastigotes induced the rapid release of neutrophil extracellular traps from human neutrophils and were...

2013
Kristof Van Avondt Ruth Fritsch-Stork Ronald H. W. M. Derksen Linde Meyaard

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of systemic Lupus erythematosus (SLE), since netting neutrophils release potentially immunogenic autoantigens including histones, LL37, human neutrophil peptide (HNP), and self-DNA. In turn, these NETs activate plasmacytoid dendritic cells resulting in aggravation of inflammation and disease. How suppression of NET f...

2015
Yoshiro Kobayashi

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) are involved in bacterial killing as well as autoimmunity, because NETs contain proteases, bactericidal peptides, DNA and ribonucleoprotein. NETs are formed via a novel type of cell death called NETosis. NETosis is distinct from apoptosis, but it resembles necrosis in that both membranes are not intact so that they allow intracellular proteins to leak outsi...

2016
Anna-Karin Olsson Jessica Cedervall

It has become increasingly clear that circulating immune cells in the body have a major impact on cancer development, progression, and outcome. The role of both platelets and neutrophils as independent regulators of various processes in cancer has been known for long, but it has quite recently emerged that the platelet-neutrophil interplay is yet a critical component to take into account during...

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology 2013
Jean-Marc Tadie Hong-Beom Bae Shaoning Jiang Dae Won Park Celeste P Bell Huan Yang Jean-Francois Pittet Kevin Tracey Victor J Thannickal Edward Abraham Jaroslaw W Zmijewski

Although neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) form to prevent dissemination of pathogenic microorganisms, excessive release of DNA and DNA-associated proteins can also perpetuate sterile inflammation. In this study, we found that the danger-associated molecular pattern protein high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) can induce NET formation. NET formation was found after exposure of wild-type and re...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 2016
Christian C Yost Hansjörg Schwertz Mark J Cody Jared A Wallace Robert A Campbell Adriana Vieira-de-Abreu Claudia V Araujo Sebastian Schubert Estelle S Harris Jesse W Rowley Matthew T Rondina James M Fulcher Curry L Koening Andrew S Weyrich Guy A Zimmerman

Neutrophil granulocytes, also called polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs), extrude molecular lattices of decondensed chromatin studded with histones, granule enzymes, and antimicrobial peptides that are referred to as neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). NETs capture and contain bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens. Nevertheless, experimental evidence indicates that NETs also cause inflammat...

2017
Ming-li Zhao Heng Chi Li Sun

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) are structures released by neutrophils as a cellular immune defense against microbial invasion. The process of NETs generation, netosis (NETosis), can take place via either a suicidal mechanism, during which the NETs-releasing cells became dead, or a "live" mechanism, during which the NETs-releasing cells remain vital. NETosis has been studied intensively i...

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