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Neutrophils in animal models of autoimmune disease
Authors
Abram
Ajuebor
+150 more
Albanesi
Alves
Amaral
Askenasy
Attila Mócsai
Aube
Baik
Barnado
Bento
Binstadt
Braswell
Brinkmann
Buanne
Campbell
Campbell
Carlson
Carneiro-Sampaio
Chan
Chen
Chen
Chen
Chiriac
Christensen
Clifford A. Lowell
Coit
Coquery
Cronstein
Croxford
Cumpelik
Diana
Diana
Ditzel
Dwivedi
Ehrenstein
Elliott
Eyles
Forster
Fournier
Futosi
Gaipl
Garcia
Goldberg
Grayson
Guerreiro-Cacais
Guiducci
Gupta
Hattar
Heimbach
Helms
Henry
Heymann
Hickman
Holden
Huang
Kahlenberg
Kallenberg
Kaplan
Katayama
Kelkka
Kessenbrock
Kim
Kishida
Knight
Knight
Knight
Kovacs
Kuhl
Lamagna
Lande
Li
Lin
Lindwall
Liu
Lood
Maalouf
Maicas
Mancardi
Marciano
Marrakchi
Martinon
Mayadas
McColl
McGonagle
McGonagle
Merrill
Metzler
Metzler
Miller
Milora
Mocsai
Mocsai
Moline-Velazquez
Nemeth
Nesterovitch
O'Shea
Odobasic
Odobasic
Okumura
Ooi
Oswald
Palanichamy
Palmen
Patel
Pfister
Pieterse
Pietronigro
Pietrosimone
Rodrigues-Sousa
Rohrbach
Rumble
Ryckman
Sadik
Samavedam
Sangaletti
Scapini
Scapini
Schauer
Schmidt
Schon
Schon
Schreiber
Schreiber
Schreiber
Shao
Smith
Smith
So
Spengler
Steiger
Steinbach
Sumida
Summers
Tamás Németh
Terkeltaub
Tortola
Ueyama
van der Fits
Vandal
Volmering
Wallace
Walter
Willis
Wipke
Wise
Xiao
Yu
Zehntner
Zenaro
Zhang
Zhang
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Neutrophils have traditionally been thought to play only a peripheral role in the genesis of many autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. However, recent studies in a variety of animal models suggest that these cells are central to the initiation and propagation of autoimmunity. The use of mouse models, which allow either deletion of neutrophils or the targeting of specific neutrophil functions, has revealed the many complex ways these cells contribute to autoimmune/inflammatory processes. This includes generation of self antigens through the process of NETosis, regulation of T-cell and dendritic cell activation, production of cytokines such as BAFF that stimulate self-reactive B-cells, as well as indirect effects on epithelial cell stability. In comparing the many different autoimmune models in which neutrophils have been examined, a number of common underlying themes emerge - such as a role for neutrophils in stimulating vascular permeability in arthritis, encephalitis and colitis. The use of animal models has also stimulated the development of new therapeutics that target neutrophil functions, such as NETosis, that may prove beneficial in human disease. This review will summarize neutrophil contributions in a number of murine autoimmune/inflammatory disease models. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd
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