Cells (Jul 2023)

Neutrophil Extracellular Traps Drive Dacryolithiasis

  • Leticija Zlatar,
  • Thomas Timm,
  • Günter Lochnit,
  • Rostyslav Bilyy,
  • Tobias Bäuerle,
  • Marco Munoz-Becerra,
  • Georg Schett,
  • Jasmin Knopf,
  • Jens Heichel,
  • Mohammad Javed Ali,
  • Mirco Schapher,
  • Friedrich Paulsen,
  • Martin Herrmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12141857
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 14
p. 1857

Abstract

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Mucopeptide concretions, previously called dacryoliths, are macroscopic stones that commonly obstruct the lacrimal sac. The mechanism behind dacryolithiasis remains unclear; however, the involvement of various immune cells, including neutrophils, has been confirmed. These findings remain limited, and no information on neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), essentially involved in the pathogenesis of other lithiases, is available yet. Here, we employ microcomputed tomography, magnetic resonance tomography, histochemistry, mass spectrometry, and enzyme activity analyses to investigate the role of neutrophils and NETs in dacryolithiasis. We classify mucopeptide concretions into three types, with respect to the quantity of cellular and acellular material, polysaccharides, and mucosubstances. We propose the role of neutrophils and NETs within the existing model of gradual formation and growth of mucopeptide concretions, with neutrophils contributing to the initial stages of dacryolithiasis, as they localized on the inner (older) parts of the tissue. As NETs localized on the outer (newer) parts of the tissue, we link their role to the late stages of dacryolithiasis, presumably maintaining the proinflammatory environment and preventing efficient clearance. An abundance of IgG on the surface indicates the involvement of the adaptive immune system later as well. These findings bring new perspectives on dacryolithiasis, in which the innate and adaptive immune system are essentially involved.

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