Publication date: 15 May 2018
Source:Immunity, Volume 48, Issue 5
Author(s): Cong Huang, Philipp Niethammer
Tissue damage and infection are deemed likewise triggers of innate immune responses. But whereas neutrophil responses to microbes are generally protective, neutrophil recruitment into damaged tissues without infection is deleterious. Why neutrophils respond to tissue damage and not just to microbes is unknown. Is it a flaw of the innate immune system that persists because evolution did not select against it, or does it provide a selective advantage? Here we dissect the contribution of tissue damage signaling to antimicrobial immune responses in a live vertebrate. By intravital imaging of zebrafish larvae, a powerful model for innate immunity, we show that prevention of tissue damage signaling upon microbial ear infection abrogates leukocyte chemotaxis and reduces animal survival, at least in part, through suppression of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPla2), which integrates tissue damage- and microbe-derived cues. Thus, microbial cues are insufficient, and damage signaling is essential for antimicrobial neutrophil responses in zebrafish.
Graphical abstract
Teaser
Tissue damage signaling in the absence of pathogens causes harmful neutrophil infiltration into damaged organs with no obvious benefit for the host. By intravital imaging of zebrafish larvae, Huang and Niethammer reveal a beneficial role for tissue damage signaling as prerequisite for rapid neutrophil recruitment to microbial infection sites.https://ift.tt/2Im5hgf
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