About this Research Topic
Over the past decade, the field of neutrophil biology has exploded, with remarkable discoveries highlighting neutrophils as indispensable players in immune regulation. While neutrophils are still recognized to be the prominent phagocytes involved in clearance of pathogens and cell debris, they are beginning to emerge as essential communicators—interacting with the endothelium and platelets to influence vascular health and thrombosis; extruding and displaying autoantigens while priming B cells with life-sustaining BAFF; and playing a crucial role in malignancy as myeloid-derived suppressor cells and as accelerators of metastasis. Recent data is also uncovering neutrophil plasticity since they have the capacity to undertake novel effector functions in response to different triggers. Altogether, neutrophils not only clear pathogens, but they also communicate, interacting with the neighboring cells and molecules in order to shape the overall immune response.
The aim of this Research Topic is to gather a wide collection of basic and translational Review and Original Research articles on neutrophil interactions with—and regulation of—innate immunity, adaptive immunity, and malignancy in order to (i) highlight the role of neutrophils in shaping our immune system; (ii) define the role of neutrophils in autoimmunity and malignancy; and (iii) promote the development of neutrophil-targeted therapies. In this Research Topic, we welcome the submission of Reviews and Original Research articles covering the following topics:
1) Role of neutrophil sensors in their communication with other immune cells
2) Clearance by/of neutrophils and their interaction with macrophages.
3) Neutrophil cross-talk with platelets and other innate immune cells.
4) Neutrophil migration and interaction with the endothelium.
5) Neutrophil cross-talk with B and T cells.
6) Neutrophil-derived autoantigens and their role in immune cell activation and autoimmunity.
7) Interaction of neutrophils with cancer cells and immune cells during malignancy.
Keywords: Neutrophil, Autoimmunity, Clearance, Cross-talk, Malignancy
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.