Litcius/Paper detail

PAD4 controls chemoattractant production and neutrophil trafficking in malaria

Drinalda Cela, Sebastian Lorenz Knackstedt, Sarah Groves, Christopher M Rice, Jamie Tae Wook Kwon, Benjamin Mordmüller, Borko Amulic

2021Journal of Leukocyte Biology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4) is a key regulator of inflammation but its function in infections remains incompletely understood. We investigate PAD4 in the context of malaria and demonstrate a role in regulation of immune cell trafficking and chemokine production. PAD4 regulates liver immunopathology by promoting neutrophil trafficking in a Plasmodium chabaudi mouse malaria model. In human macrophages, PAD4 regulates expression of CXCL chemokines in response to stimulation with TLR ligands and P. falciparum. Using patient samples, we show that CXCL1 may be a biomarker for severe malaria. PAD4 inhibition promotes disease tolerance and may represent a therapeutic avenue in malaria.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyImmunologyChemokineCXCL1Plasmodium chabaudiInflammationMalariaContext (archaeology)Immune systemProinflammatory cytokineChemotaxisRegulatorImmunopathologyLeukocyte TraffickingImmunityCytokineInterleukin 8Gene knockdownPlasmodium falciparumGranulocyteStimulationCXCL2Function (biology)Regulation of gene expressionBiomarkerMicrobiologyS100A9Innate immune systemDiseaseMalaria Research and ControlChemokine receptors and signalingParasites and Host Interactions