@article{Ceri Evans_Katharine Orf_Erzsebet Horvath_Michael Levin_Josu De La Fuente_Subarna Chakravorty_Aubrey J. Cunnington_2015, place={Pavia, Italy}, title={Impairment of neutrophil oxidative burst in children with sickle cell disease is associated with heme oxygenase-1}, volume={100}, url={https://haematologica.org/article/view/7578}, DOI={10.3324/haematol.2015.128777}, abstractNote={Sickle cell disease is a risk factor for invasive bacterial infections, and splenic dysfunction is believed to be the main underlying cause. We have previously shown that the liberation of heme in acute hemolysis can induce heme oxygenase-1 during granulopoiesis, impairing the ability of developing neutrophils to mount a bactericidal oxidative burst, and increasing susceptibility to bacterial infection. We hypothesized that this may also occur with the chronic hemolysis of sickle cell disease, potentially contributing to susceptibility to infections. We found that neutrophil oxidative burst activity was significantly lower in treatment-naïve children with sickle cell disease compared to age-, gender- and ethnicity-matched controls, whilst degranulation was similar. The defect in neutrophil oxidative burst was quantitatively related to both systemic heme oxygenase-1 activity (assessed by carboxyhemoglobin concentration) and neutrophil mobilization. A distinct population of heme oxygenase-1-expressing cells was present in the bone marrow of children with sickle cell disease, but not in healthy children, with a surface marker profile consistent with neutrophil progenitors (CD49d<sup>Hi</sup> CD24<sup>Lo</sup> CD15<sup>Int</sup> CD16<sup>Int</sup> CD11b<sup>+/−</sup&gt;). Incubation of promyelocytic HL-60 cells with the heme oxygenase-1 substrate and inducer, hemin, demonstrated that heme oxygenase-1 induction during neutrophilic differentiation could reduce oxidative burst capacity. These findings indicate that impairment of neutrophil oxidative burst activity in sickle cell disease is associated with hemolysis and heme oxygenase-1 expression. Neutrophil dysfunction might contribute to risk of infection in sickle cell disease, and measurement of neutrophil oxidative burst might be used to identify patients at greatest risk of infection, who might benefit from enhanced prophylaxis.}, number={12}, journal={Haematologica}, author={Ceri Evans and Katharine Orf and Erzsebet Horvath and Michael Levin and Josu De La Fuente and Subarna Chakravorty and Aubrey J. Cunnington}, year={2015}, month={Nov.}, pages={1508-1516} }