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Papers of the Week


2022 Oct 21


iScience


25


10

Transcellular biosynthesis of leukotriene B orchestrates neutrophil swarming to fungi.

Authors

Hopke A, Lin T, Scherer AK, Shay AE, Timmer KD, Wilson-Mifsud B, Mansour MK, Serhan CN, Irimia D, Hurley BP
iScience. 2022 Oct 21; 25(10):105226.
PMID: 36267914.

Abstract

Neutrophil swarming is an emergent host defense mechanism triggered by targets larger than a single neutrophil's capacity to phagocytose. Swarming synergizes neutrophil functions, including chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and coordinates their deployment by many interacting neutrophils. The potent inflammatory lipid mediator leukotriene B (LTB) has been established as central to orchestrating neutrophil activities during swarming. However, the details regarding how this eicosanoid choreographs the neutrophils involved in swarming are not well explained. Here we leverage microfluidics, genetically deficient mouse cells, and targeted metabolipidomic analysis to demonstrate that transcellular biosynthesis occurs among neutrophils to generate LTB. Furthermore, transcellular biosynthesis is an entirely sufficient means of generating LTB for the purposes of orchestrating neutrophil swarming. These results further our understanding of how neutrophils coordinate their activities during swarming, which will be critical in the design of eventual therapies that can harness the power of swarming behavior.