Neutrophils in inflammatory bowel disease: disease-promoting versus protective functions
Shaochen Yu, Mengjie Zhang, Wenlu Niu, Yuting Huang, Ziyue Dou, Beibei Tian, Langlang Yang, Jian Lu

TL;DR
This review explores how neutrophils can both worsen and help heal inflammatory bowel disease, offering new insights for treatment.
Contribution
The paper highlights the dual roles of neutrophils in IBD and proposes precision therapeutic strategies targeting them.
Findings
Neutrophils can promote IBD by releasing harmful molecules like ROS and NETs.
Neutrophils also aid in tissue repair and maintain microbial balance in the gut.
Understanding neutrophil heterogeneity and interactions with the microbiota could lead to new treatments.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a complex chronic intestinal inflammatory disorder whose pathogenesis involves aberrant interactions between genetic, environmental, microbial, and immune factors. Neutrophils, as key effector cells of innate immunity, are among the first immune cells to infiltrate the inflamed mucosa in IBD, and their role in the disease course is multifaceted. This review systematically elaborates on the dual functions of neutrophils in IBD. On one hand, activated neutrophils act as crucial “destroyers” promoting the initiation and progression of IBD by releasing effector molecules such as reactive oxygen species (ROS), proteases, and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), which disrupt the intestinal epithelial barrier, amplify the inflammatory cascade, promote thrombosis, and mediate resistance to corticosteroids and biologics. On the other hand, neutrophils also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeutrophil, Myeloperoxidase and Oxidative Mechanisms · Immune cells in cancer · Inflammatory Bowel Disease
