Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5654929 Clinical Immunology 2017 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Infants develop four distinct blood neutrophil subsets during respiratory infection.•Viral infection is characterized by absence of a suppressive subset in blood.•However, bacterial co-infection is associated with suppressive neutrophils in blood.•Suppressive neutrophils can migrate to the lungs.

Neutrophils are the predominant inflammatory cells recruited to the respiratory tract as part of the innate immune response to viral infections. Recent reports indicate the existence of distinct functional neutrophil subsets in the circulatory compartment of adults, following severe inflammatory conditions. Here, we evaluated the occurrence of neutrophil subsets in blood and broncho-alveolar lavage fluid during severe viral respiratory infection in infants based on CD16/CD62L expression. We show that during the course of severe respiratory infection infants may develop four heterogeneous neutrophil subsets in blood (mature, immature, progenitor, and suppressive neutrophils), each with distinct activation states. However, while isolated viral respiratory infection was characterized by a relative absence of suppressive neutrophils in both blood and lungs, only patients with bacterial co-infection were shown to produce suppressive neutrophils. These data suggest the occurrence of distinct and unique neutrophil subset responses during severe viral and (secondary) bacterial respiratory infection in infants.

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