Impact of toll-like receptor 4 stimulation on human neonatal neutrophil spontaneous migration, transcriptomics, and cytokine production

被引:12
作者
Raymond, Steven L. [1 ]
Hawkins, Russell B. [1 ]
Murphy, Tyler J. [1 ]
Rincon, Jaimar C. [1 ]
Stortz, Julie A. [1 ]
Lopez, Maria Cecilia [2 ]
Ungaro, Ricardo [1 ]
Ellett, Felix [3 ]
Baker, Henry V. [2 ]
Wynn, James L. [4 ]
Moldawer, Lyle L. [1 ]
Irimia, Daniel [3 ]
Larson, Shawn D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Coll Med, Dept Surg, Gainesville, FL 32610 USA
[2] Univ Florida, Coll Med, Dept Mol Genet & Microbiol, Gainesville, FL USA
[3] Harvard Med Sch, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Shriners Burns Hosp, BioMEMS Resource Ctr,Dept Surg, Boston, MA USA
[4] Univ Florida, Coll Med, Dept Pediat & Pathol Immunol & Lab Med, Gainesville, FL USA
来源
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM | 2018年 / 96卷 / 07期
关键词
Immunology; Innate immunity; Inflammation; Microfluidics; Neutrophil migration; Lipopolysaccharide; SEPSIS; ACTIVATION; BLOOD; MICROFLUIDICS; CHEMOTAXIS; PI3K-GAMMA; AGONISTS; GAMMA;
D O I
10.1007/s00109-018-1646-5
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Neonates rely on their innate immune system, and neutrophils in particular, to recognize and combat life-threatening bacterial infections. Pretreatment with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 agonist, improves survival to polymicrobial sepsis in neonatal mice by enhancing neutrophil recruitment. To understand the response of human neonatal neutrophils to TLR4 stimulation, ex vivo spontaneous neutrophil migration, neutrophil transcriptomics, and cytokine production in the presence and absence of LPS were measured directly from whole blood of adults, term neonates, and preterm neonates. Spontaneous neutrophil migration was measured on novel microfluidic devices with time-lapse imaging for 10 h. Genome-wide neutrophil transcriptomics and plasma cytokine concentrations were also determined. Preterm neonates had significantly fewer spontaneously migrating neutrophils at baseline, and both term and preterm neonates had decreased neutrophil velocity, compared to adults. In the presence of LPS stimulation, the number of spontaneously migrating neutrophils was reduced in preterm neonates compared to term neonates and adults. Neutrophil velocity was not significantly different among groups with LPS stimulation. Preterm neonates upregulated expression of genes associated with the recruitment and response of neutrophils following LPS stimulation, but failed to upregulate the expression of genes associated with antimicrobial and antiviral responses. Plasma levels of IL-1b, IL-6, IL-8, MIP-1a, and TNF-a increased in response to LPS stimulation in all groups, but IL-10 was increased only in term and preterm neonates. In conclusion, age-specific changes in spontaneous neutrophil migration counts are not affected by LPS despite changes in gene expression and cytokine production. Preterm neonates have reduced spontaneous neutrophil migration compared to term neonates and adults in the absence and presence of TLR4 stimulation. Preterm and term neonates have reduced neutrophil velocities compared to adults in the absence of TLR4 stimulation but no difference in the presence of TLR4 stimulation. Unique transcriptomic response to TLR4 stimulation is observed in neutrophils from preterm neonates, term neonates, and adults. TLR4 stimulation produces an age-specific cytokine response.
引用
收藏
页码:673 / 684
页数:12
相关论文
共 21 条
[1]   Toll-like receptor agonists stimulate human neutrophil migration via activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases [J].
Aomatsu, Kazuki ;
Kato, Takayuki ;
Fujita, Hisakazu ;
Hato, Fumihiko ;
Oshitani, Nobuhide ;
Kamata, Noriko ;
Tamura, Tomohiko ;
Arakawa, Tetsuo ;
Kitagawa, Seiichi .
IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 123 (02) :171-180
[2]   Quantitating the cell: turning images into numbers with ImageJ [J].
Arena, Ellen T. ;
Rueden, Curtis T. ;
Hiner, Mark C. ;
Wang, Shulei ;
Yuan, Ming ;
Eliceiri, Kevin W. .
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2017, 6 (02)
[3]   TRIF-Dependent Innate Immune Activation Is Critical for Survival to Neonatal Gram-Negative Sepsis [J].
Cuenca, Alex G. ;
Joiner, Dallas N. ;
Gentile, Lori F. ;
Cuenca, Angela L. ;
Wynn, James L. ;
Kelly-Scumpia, Kindra M. ;
Scumpia, Philip O. ;
Behrns, Kevin E. ;
Efron, Philip A. ;
Nacionales, Dina ;
Lui, Chao ;
Wallet, Shannon M. ;
Reeves, Westley H. ;
Mathews, Clayton E. ;
Moldawer, Lyle L. .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2015, 194 (03) :1169-1177
[4]   Diagnosis of sepsis from a drop of blood by measurement of spontaneous neutrophil motility in a microfluidic assay [J].
Ellett, Felix ;
Jorgensen, Julianne ;
Marand, Anika L. ;
Liu, Yuk Ming ;
Martinez, Myriam M. ;
Sein, Vicki ;
Butler, Kathryn L. ;
Lee, Jarone ;
Irimia, Daniel .
NATURE BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, 2018, 2 (04) :207-214
[5]   Interferon-γ activation of polymorphonuclear neutrophil function [J].
Ellis, TN ;
Beaman, BL .
IMMUNOLOGY, 2004, 112 (01) :2-12
[6]  
HAMMOND MEW, 1995, J IMMUNOL, V155, P1428
[7]   Central role for G protein-coupled phosphoinositide 3-kinase γ in inflammation [J].
Hirsch, E ;
Katanaev, VL ;
Garlanda, C ;
Azzolino, O ;
Pirola, L ;
Silengo, L ;
Sozzani, S ;
Mantovani, A ;
Altruda, F ;
Wymann, MP .
SCIENCE, 2000, 287 (5455) :1049-1053
[8]   Neonatal and Perinatal Infections [J].
Khan, Amira M. ;
Morris, Shaun K. ;
Bhutta, Zulfiqiar A. .
PEDIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2017, 64 (04) :785-798
[9]   Clinical microfluidics for neutrophil genomics and proteomics [J].
Kotz, Kenneth T. ;
Xiao, Wenzong ;
Miller-Graziano, Carol ;
Qian, Wei-Jun ;
Russom, Aman ;
Warner, Elizabeth A. ;
Moldawer, Lyle L. ;
De, Asit ;
Bankey, Paul E. ;
Petritis, Brianne O. ;
Camp, David G., II ;
Rosenbach, Alan E. ;
Goverman, Jeremy ;
Fagan, Shawn P. ;
Brownstein, Bernard H. ;
Irimia, Daniel ;
Xu, Weihong ;
Wilhelmy, Julie ;
Mindrinos, Michael N. ;
Smith, Richard D. ;
Davis, Ronald W. ;
Tompkins, Ronald G. ;
Toner, Mehmet .
NATURE MEDICINE, 2010, 16 (09) :1042-U142
[10]   3.6 Million Neonatal Deaths-What Is Progressing and What Is Not? [J].
Lawn, Joy E. ;
Kerber, Kate ;
Enweronu-Laryea, Christabel ;
Cousens, Simon .
SEMINARS IN PERINATOLOGY, 2010, 34 (06) :371-386