Self-extinguishing relay waves enable homeostatic control of human neutrophil swarming

Evelyn Strickland(University of California, San Francisco), Deng Pan(Harvard University), C. Godfrey(Harvard University), Julia S. Kim(University of California, San Francisco), Alex Hopke(Shriners Hospitals for Children - Erie), Wencheng Ji(Weizmann Institute of Science), Maureen Degrange(Leidos (United States)), Bryant Villavicencio(Kelly Services (United States)), Michael K. Mansour(Harvard University), Christa S. Zerbe(National Institutes of Health), Daniel Irimia(Shriners Hospitals for Children - Erie), Ariel Amir(Harvard University), Orion D. Weiner(University of California, San Francisco)
Developmental Cell
July 5, 2024
Cited by 24Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Neutrophils collectively migrate to sites of injury and infection. How these swarms are coordinated to ensure the proper level of recruitment is unknown. Using an ex vivo model of infection, we show that human neutrophil swarming is organized by multiple pulsatile chemoattractant waves. These waves propagate through active relay in which stimulated neutrophils trigger their neighbors to release additional swarming cues. Unlike canonical active relays, we find these waves to be self-terminating, limiting the spatial range of cell recruitment. We identify an NADPH-oxidase-based negative feedback loop that is needed for this self-terminating behavior. We observe near-constant levels of neutrophil recruitment over a wide range of starting conditions, revealing surprising robustness in the swarming process. This homeostatic control is achieved by larger and more numerous swarming waves at lower cell densities. We link defective wave termination to a broken recruitment homeostat in the context of human chronic granulomatous disease.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis