A subset of neutrophils in human systemic inflammation inhibits T cell responses through Mac-1
University Medical Center Utrecht · Radboud University Medical Center · +1 more institution
Abstract
Suppression of immune responses is necessary to limit damage to host tissue during inflammation, but it can be detrimental in specific immune responses, such as sepsis and antitumor immunity. Recently, immature myeloid cells have been implicated in the suppression of immune responses in mouse models of cancer, infectious disease, bone marrow transplantation, and autoimmune disease. Here, we report the identification of a subset of mature human neutrophils (CD11cbright/CD62Ldim/CD11bbright/CD16bright) as what we believe to be a unique circulating population of myeloid cells, capable of suppressing human T cell proliferation. These cells were observed in humans in vivo during acute systemic inflammation induced…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Inflammation
- Immune system
- Immunology
- Myeloid
- Biology
- Systemic inflammation
- T cell
- Bone marrow
- Good health and well-being