Peripheral priming induces plastic transcriptomic and proteomic responses in circulating neutrophils required for pathogen containment

Rainer Kaiser(LMU Klinikum), Christoph Gold(LMU Klinikum), Markus Joppich(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Quentin Loew(LMU Klinikum), Anastassia Akhalkatsi(LMU Klinikum), Tonina T. Mueller(LMU Klinikum), Felix Offensperger(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Augustin Droste zu Senden(LMU Klinikum), Oliver Popp(Max Delbrück Center), Lea Di Fina(LMU Klinikum), Viktoria Knottenberg(LMU Klinikum), Alejandro Martinez-Navarro(LMU Klinikum), Luke Eivers(LMU Klinikum), Afra Anjum(LMU Klinikum), Raphael Escaig(LMU Klinikum), Nils Bruns(LMU Klinikum), Eva Briem(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Robin Dewender(LMU Klinikum), Abhinaya Muraly(LMU Klinikum), Sezer Akgöl(LMU Klinikum), Bartolo Ferraro(LMU Klinikum), Jonathan K. L. Hoeflinger(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Vivien Polewka(LMU Klinikum), Najib Ben Khaled(LMU Klinikum), Julian Allgeier(LMU Klinikum), Steffen Tiedt(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Martin Dichgans(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Bernd Engelmann(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Wolfgang Enard(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Philipp Mertins(Max Delbrück Center), Norbert Hübner(Max Delbrück Center), Ludwig T. Weckbach(LMU Klinikum), Ralf Zimmer(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Steffen Maßberg(LMU Klinikum), Konstantin Stark(LMU Klinikum), Leo Nicolai(LMU Klinikum), Kami Pekayvaz(LMU Klinikum)
Science Advances
March 22, 2024
Cited by 16Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Neutrophils rapidly respond to inflammation and infection, but to which degree their functional trajectories after mobilization from the bone marrow are shaped within the circulation remains vague. Experimental limitations have so far hampered neutrophil research in human disease. Here, using innovative fixation and single-cell-based toolsets, we profile human and murine neutrophil transcriptomes and proteomes during steady state and bacterial infection. We find that peripheral priming of circulating neutrophils leads to dynamic shifts dominated by conserved up-regulation of antimicrobial genes across neutrophil substates, facilitating pathogen containment. We show the TLR4/NF-κB signaling-dependent up-regulation of canonical neutrophil activation markers like CD177/NB-1 during acute inflammation, resulting in functional shifts in vivo. Blocking de novo RNA synthesis in circulating neutrophils abrogates these plastic shifts and prevents the adaptation of antibacterial neutrophil programs by up-regulation of distinct effector molecules upon infection. These data underline transcriptional plasticity as a relevant mechanism of functional neutrophil reprogramming during acute infection to foster bacterial containment within the circulation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis