Author:
Creusat Florent,Jouan Youenn,Gonzalez Loïc,Barsac Emilie,Ilango Guy,Lemoine Roxane,Soulard Daphnée,Boisseau Chloé,Guillon Antoine,Lin Qiaochu,de Amat Herbozo Carolina,Sencio Valentin,Winter Nathalie,Trottein François,Si-Tahar Mustapha,Briard Benoit,Mallevaey Thierry,Faveeuw Christelle,Baranek Thomas,Paget Christophe
Abstract
AbstractNeutrophil subsets endowed with regulatory/suppressive properties are widely regarded as deleterious immune cells that can jeopardize antitumoral response and/or antimicrobial resistance. Here, we describe a sizeable fraction of neutrophils characterized by the expression of Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) in biological fluids of humans and mice with severe viral respiratory infections (VRI). Biological and transcriptomic approaches indicated that VRI-driven PD-L1+neutrophils are endowed with potent regulatory functions and reduced classical antimicrobial properties, as compared to their PD-L1-counterpart. VRI-induced regulatory PD-L1+neutrophils were generated in the bone marrow in an IFN-γ-dependent manner and were quickly mobilized into the inflamed lungs where they fulfilled their maturation. Neutrophil depletion and PD-L1 blockade during experimental VRI resulted in higher mortality, increased local inflammation and reduced expression of resolving factors. These findings suggest that PD-L1+neutrophils are important players in disease tolerance by mitigating local inflammation during severe VRI and that they may constitute relevant targets for future immune interventions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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