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The Enigma of Eosinophil Degranulation

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22137091

Keywords

degranulation; eosinophils; eosinophil extracellular trap; granule proteins; piecemeal degranulation; exocytosis; cytolysis

Funding

  1. Universitat Bern
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_173215, 310030_184816]
  3. Russian Government Program for the Recruitment of the Leading Scientists into the Russian Institutions of Higher Education [075-15-2021-600]

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Eosinophils are specialized white blood cells involved in allergic and inflammatory diseases, with granule release being a key effector function. The exact mechanisms of different granule release types are still unknown.
Eosinophils are specialized white blood cells, which are involved in the pathology of diverse allergic and nonallergic inflammatory diseases. Eosinophils are traditionally known as cytotoxic effector cells but have been suggested to additionally play a role in immunomodulation and maintenance of homeostasis. The exact role of these granule-containing leukocytes in health and diseases is still a matter of debate. Degranulation is one of the key effector functions of eosinophils in response to diverse stimuli. The different degranulation patterns occurring in eosinophils (piecemeal degranulation, exocytosis and cytolysis) have been extensively studied in the last few years. However, the exact mechanism of the diverse degranulation types remains unknown and is still under investigation. In this review, we focus on recent findings and highlight the diversity of stimulation and methods used to evaluate eosinophil degranulation.

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