AI Article Synopsis

  • Severe bacterial infections are a big problem for patients with certain blood disorders called β-thalassaemia/HbE, which can make them very sick or lead to death.
  • The study looked at how the immune system of these patients works, focusing on how well their white blood cells can fight off bacteria.
  • It found that although the patients' white blood cells could still eat bacteria (phagocytosis) normally, they had trouble moving to the infection site, which made them more likely to get infections.

Article Abstract

Severe bacterial infection is a major complication causing morbidity and mortality in β-thalassaemia/HbE patients. Innate immunity constitutes the first line of defence against bacterial infection. This study aimed to comprehensively investigate the innate immune phenotype and function related to factors predisposing to infection in non-transfusion-dependent (NTD) β°-thalassaemia/HbE patients. Twenty-six patients and 17 healthy subjects were recruited to determine complement activity (C3, C4, mannose-binding lectin and CH50) and surface receptor expression including markers of phagocytosis (CD11b, CD16 and C3bR), inflammation (C5aR) and migration (CD11b, CXCR1 and CXCR2) on neutrophils and monocytes. In addition, phagocytosis and oxidative burst activity of neutrophils and monocytes against Escherichia coli and neutrophil migration were examined. Decreased C3 and surface expression of CD11b and C3bR on neutrophils were found in patients. However, phagocytosis of neutrophils in patients was still in the normal range. Interestingly, patients displayed a significant reduction of surface expression of CXCR2 [1705 ± 217 mean fluorescent intensity (MFI)] on neutrophils, leading to impaired neutrophil migration (9·2 ± 7·7%) when compared to neutrophils from healthy subjects (2261 ± 627 MFI and 27·8 ± 9% respectively). Moreover, surface expression of CXCR2 on neutrophils was associated with splenectomy status, serum ferritin and haemoglobin levels. Therefore, impaired neutrophil migration could contribute to the increased susceptibility to infection seen in NTD β°-thalassaemia/HbE patients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bjh.16295DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neutrophil migration
16
surface expression
12
bacterial infection
8
ntd β°-thalassaemia/hbe
8
β°-thalassaemia/hbe patients
8
healthy subjects
8
cxcr2 neutrophils
8
neutrophils monocytes
8
neutrophils patients
8
expression cxcr2
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!