1. Academic Validation
  2. Constitutive neutrophil apoptosis: regulation by cell concentration via S100 A8/9 and the MEK-ERK pathway

Constitutive neutrophil apoptosis: regulation by cell concentration via S100 A8/9 and the MEK-ERK pathway

  • PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e29333. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0029333.
Mizhir Atallah 1 Alon Krispin Uriel Trahtemberg Sandrine Ben-Hamron Amir Grau Inna Verbovetski Dror Mevorach
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 The Laboratory for Cellular and Molecular Immunology, Department of Medicine, Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Abstract

Programmed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental mechanism in tissue and cell homeostasis. It was long suggested that Apoptosis regulates the cell number in diverse cell populations; however no clear mechanism was shown. Neutrophils are the short-lived, first-line defense of innate immunity, with an estimated t = 1/2 of 8 hours and a high turnover rate. Here we first show that spontaneous neutrophil constitutive PCD is regulated by cell concentrations. Using a proteomic approach, we identified the S100 A8/9 complex, which constitutes roughly 40% of cytosolic protein in neutrophils, as mediating this effect. We further demonstrate that it regulates cell survival via a signaling mechanism involving MEK-ERK via TLR4 and CD11B/CD18. This mechanism is suggested to have a fine-tuning role in regulating the neutrophil number in bone marrow, peripheral blood, and inflammatory sites.

Figures