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Therapeutic targeting of neutrophil exocytosis

Sergio Catz, Kenneth R. McLeish

2020Journal of Leukocyte Biology36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dysregulation of neutrophil activation causes disease in humans. Neither global inhibition of neutrophil functions nor neutrophil depletion provides safe and/or effective therapeutic approaches. The role of neutrophil granule exocytosis in multiple steps leading to recruitment and cell injury led each of our laboratories to develop molecular inhibitors that interfere with specific molecular regulators of secretion. This review summarizes neutrophil granule formation and contents, the role granule cargo plays in neutrophil functional responses and neutrophil-mediated diseases, and the mechanisms of granule release that provide the rationale for development of our exocytosis inhibitors. We present evidence for the inhibition of granule exocytosis in vitro and in vivo by those inhibitors and summarize animal data indicating that inhibition of neutrophil exocytosis is a viable therapeutic strategy.

Topics & Concepts

ExocytosisGranule (geology)BiologySecretionCell biologyImmunologyBiochemistryPaleontologyNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative MechanismsBlood disorders and treatmentsCell Adhesion Molecules Research
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