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Patients with COVID-19: in the dark-NETs of neutrophils

Authors :
Ackermann, Maximilian
Anders, Hans-Joachim
Bilyy, Rostyslav
Bowlin, Gary L.
Daniel, Christoph
De Lorenzo, Rebecca
Egeblad, Mikala
Henneck, Timo
Hidalgo, Andrés
Hoffmann, Markus
Hohberger, Bettina
Kanthi, Yogendra
Kaplan, Mariana J.
Knight, Jason S.
Knopf, Jasmin
Kolaczkowska, Elzbieta
Kubes, Paul
Leppkes, Moritz
Mahajan, Aparna
Manfredi, Angelo A.
Maueröder, Christian
Maugeri, Norma
Mitroulis, Ioannis
Muñoz, Luis E.
Narasaraju, Teluguakula
Naschberger, Elisabeth
Neeli, Indira
Ng, Lai Guan
Radic, Marko Z.
Ritis, Konstantinos
Rovere-Querini, Patrizia
Schapher, Mirco
Schauer, Christine
Simon, Hans-Uwe
Singh, Jeeshan
Skendros, Panagiotis
Stark, Konstantin
Stürzl, Michael
van der Vlag, Johan
Vandenabeele, Peter
Vitkov, Ljubomir
von Köckritz-Blickwede, Maren
Yanginlar, Cansu
Yousefi, Shida
Zarbock, Alexander
Schett, Georg
Herrmann, Martin
Source :
Cell Death and Differentiation; 20210101, Issue: Preprints p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 infection poses a major threat to the lungs and multiple other organs, occasionally causing death. Until effective vaccines are developed to curb the pandemic, it is paramount to define the mechanisms and develop protective therapies to prevent organ dysfunction in patients with COVID-19. Individuals that develop severe manifestations have signs of dysregulated innate and adaptive immune responses. Emerging evidence implicates neutrophils and the disbalance between neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation and degradation plays a central role in the pathophysiology of inflammation, coagulopathy, organ damage, and immunothrombosis that characterize severe cases of COVID-19. Here, we discuss the evidence supporting a role for NETs in COVID-19 manifestations and present putative mechanisms, by which NETs promote tissue injury and immunothrombosis. We present therapeutic strategies, which have been successful in the treatment of immunο-inflammatory disorders and which target dysregulated NET formation or degradation, as potential approaches that may benefit patients with severe COVID-19.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13509047 and 14765403
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Cell Death and Differentiation
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56420773
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41418-021-00805-z