Frontiers in Immunology (Oct 2021)

Neutrophil-Dependent Immunity During Pulmonary Infections and Inflammations

  • Clement Yaw Effah,
  • Emmanuel Kwateng Drokow,
  • Clement Agboyibor,
  • Lihua Ding,
  • Sitian He,
  • Shaohua Liu,
  • Senyo Yao Akorli,
  • Emmanuel Nuamah,
  • Tongwen Sun,
  • Xiaolei Zhou,
  • Hong Liu,
  • Zhiwei Xu,
  • Feifei Feng,
  • Yongjun Wu,
  • Xiaoju Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.689866
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Rapid recruitment of neutrophils to an inflamed site is one of the hallmarks of an effective host defense mechanism. The main pathway through which this happens is by the innate immune response. Neutrophils, which play an important part in innate immune defense, migrate into lungs through the modulation actions of chemokines to execute a variety of pro-inflammatory functions. Despite the importance of chemokines in host immunity, little has been discussed on their roles in host immunity. A holistic understanding of neutrophil recruitment, pattern recognition pathways, the roles of chemokines and the pathophysiological roles of neutrophils in host immunity may allow for new approaches in the treatment of infectious and inflammatory disease of the lung. Herein, this review aims at highlighting some of the developments in lung neutrophil-immunity by focusing on the functions and roles of CXC/CC chemokines and pattern recognition receptors in neutrophil immunity during pulmonary inflammations. The pathophysiological roles of neutrophils in COVID-19 and thromboembolism have also been summarized. We finally summarized various neutrophil biomarkers that can be utilized as prognostic molecules in pulmonary inflammations and discussed various neutrophil-targeted therapies for neutrophil-driven pulmonary inflammatory diseases.

Keywords