Key Points
BMN from female versus male mice express higher surface levels of CR3.
Serum from female versus male mice contains higher levels of C3.
Higher levels of CR3 and C3 may contribute to greater bactericidal capacity of female murine BMN.
Abstract
We previously reported sex differences in innate susceptibility to Staphylococcus aureus skin infection and that bone marrow neutrophils (BMN) from female mice have an enhanced ability to kill S. aureus ex vivo compared with those of male mice. However, the mechanism(s) driving this sex bias in neutrophil killing have not been reported. Given the role of opsonins such as complement, as well as their receptors, in S. aureus recognition and clearance, we investigated their contribution to the enhanced bactericidal capacity of female BMN. We found that levels of C3 in the serum and CR3 (CD11b/CD18) on the surface of BMN were higher in female compared with male mice. Consistent with increased CR3 expression following TNF-α priming, production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), an important bactericidal effector, was also increased in female versus male BMN in response to serum-opsonized S. aureus. Furthermore, blocking CD11b reduced both ROS levels and S. aureus killing by murine BMN from both sexes. However, at the same concentration of CD11b blocking Ab, S. aureus killing by female BMN was greatly reduced compared with those from male mice, suggesting CR3-dependent differences in bacterial killing between sexes. Overall, this work highlights the contributions of CR3, C3, and ROS to innate sex bias in the neutrophil response to S. aureus. Given that neutrophils are crucial for S. aureus clearance, understanding the mechanism(s) driving the innate sex bias in neutrophil bactericidal capacity could identify novel host factors important for host defense against S. aureus.
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Footnotes
This work was supported in part by Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Research Grants AI128159 and AI145324 (to P.R.H.) and Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH Grants CA163890 and CA194496 (both to E.R.P.). Services and facilities used were provided through the NIH-funded University of New Mexico (UNM) Clinical and Translational Science Center (Award UL1_TR001449). Support was also provided by the UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center (P30 CA118100) and the Flow Cytometry Shared Resource, as well as the Autophagy, Inflammation and Metabolism Center of Biomedical Research Excellence, supported by National Institute of General Medical Sciences, NIH Grant P20 GM121176.
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
Abbreviations used in this article:
- BMN
- bone marrow neutrophil
- CR
- complement receptor
- E2
- 17β-estradiol
- FcR
- Fc receptor
- ROS
- reactive oxygen species
- SSTI
- skin and soft tissue infection
- t0
- time = 0
- t60
- time = 60 min
- TSB
- trypticase soy broth.
- Received May 12, 2020.
- Accepted July 17, 2020.
- Copyright © 2020 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
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