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The Posttraumatic Increase in the Adhesion of GPCR EMR2/ADGRE2 to Circulating Neutrophils Is Not Related to Injury Severity

  • Leyu Zheng
  • , Moujie Rang
  • , Carolin Fuchs
  • , Annette Keß
  • , Mandy Wunsch
  • , Julia Hentschel
  • , Cheng-Chih Hsiao
  • , Christian Kleber
  • , Georg Osterhoff
  • , Gabriela Aust*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Leipzig University
  • Amsterdam UMC

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Trauma triggers a rapid innate immune response to aid the clearance of damaged/necrotic cells and their released damage-associated molecular pattern (DAMP). Here, we monitored the expression of EMR2/ADGRE2, involved in the functional regulation of innate immune cells, on circulating neutrophils in very severely and moderately/severely injured patients up to 240 h after trauma. Notably, neutrophilic EMR2 showed a uniform, injury severity- and type of injury-independent posttraumatic course in all patients. The percentage of EMR2+ neutrophils and their EMR2 level increased and peaked 48 h after trauma. Afterwards, they declined and normalized in some, but not all, patients. Circulating EMR2+ compared to EMR2− neutrophils express less CD62L and more CD11c, a sign of activation. Neutrophilic EMR2 regulation was verified in vitro. Remarkably, it increased, depending on extracellular calcium, in controls as well. Cytokines, enhanced in patients immediately after trauma, and sera of patients did not further affect this neutrophilic EMR2 increase, whereas apoptosis induction disrupted it. Likely the damaged/necrotic cells/DAMPs, unavoidable during neutrophil culture, stimulate the neutrophilic EMR2 increase. In summary, the rapidly increased absolute number of neutrophils, especially present in very severely injured patients, together with upregulated neutrophilic EMR2, may expand our in vivo capacity to react to and finally clear damaged/necrotic cells/DAMPs after trauma.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2657
JournalCells
Volume12
Issue number22
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2023
Externally publishedYes

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