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Progesterone promotes CXCl2-dependent vaginal neutrophil killing by activating cervical resident macrophage–neutrophil crosstalk
Carla Gómez-Oro, … , Federico Pérez-Milán, Miguel Relloso
Carla Gómez-Oro, … , Federico Pérez-Milán, Miguel Relloso
Published September 19, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(20):e177899. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.177899.
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Research Article Endocrinology Infectious disease

Progesterone promotes CXCl2-dependent vaginal neutrophil killing by activating cervical resident macrophage–neutrophil crosstalk

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Abstract

Vaginal infections in women of reproductive age represent a clinical dilemma with significant socioeconomic implications. The current understanding of mucosal immunity failure during early pathogenic invasions that allows the pathogen to grow and thrive is far from complete. Neutrophils infiltrate most tissues following circadian patterns as part of normal repair, regulation of microbiota, or immune surveillance and become more numerous after infection. Neutrophils are responsible for maintaining vaginal immunity. Specific to the vagina, neutrophils continuously infiltrate at high levels, although during ovulation, they retreat to avoid sperm damage and permit reproduction. Here we show that, after ovulation, progesterone promotes resident vaginal macrophage–neutrophil crosstalk by upregulating Yolk sac early fetal organs (FOLR2+) macrophage CXCl2 expression, in a TNFA-patrolling monocyte-derived macrophage–mediated (CX3CR1hiMHCIIhi-mediated) manner, to activate the neutrophils’ capacity to eliminate sex-transmitted and opportunistic microorganisms. Indeed, progesterone plays an essential role in conciliating the balance between the commensal microbiota, sperm, and the threat of pathogens because progesterone not only promotes a flurry of neutrophils but also increases neutrophilic fury to restore immunity after ovulation to thwart pathogenic invasion after intercourse. Therefore, modest progesterone dysregulations could lead to a suboptimal neutrophilic response, resulting in insufficient mucosal defense and recurrent unresolved infections.

Authors

Carla Gómez-Oro, Maria C. Latorre, Patricia Arribas-Poza, Alexandra Ibáñez-Escribano, Katia R. Baca-Cornejo, Jorge Gallego-Valle, Natalia López-Escobar, Mabel Mondéjar-Palencia, Marjorie Pion, Luis A. López-Fernández, Enrique Mercader, Federico Pérez-Milán, Miguel Relloso

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Figure 1

Neutrophil killing in the vaginal lumen.

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Neutrophil killing in the vaginal lumen.
(A) Adult female mice selected ...
(A) Adult female mice selected by vaginal smear and challenged in the vagina with C. albicans. Number of neutrophil and fungal burden (CFU) in the vaginal lavage. Kruskal-Wallis analysis (n = 8–12 mice per group). (B) Ovariectomized mice treated with estradiol or progesterone to mimic the ovarian cycle. Number of neutrophils and percentage of live C. albicans (CFU) in the vaginal lavage 12 hours after challenge (n = 7–8 mice per group, Mann-Whitney U test). Percentage of live sperm in the vaginal PMNs/sperm coculture (n = 3 experiments, Mann-Whitney U test). (C) Estradiol-, progesterone-, or vehicle-treated mice challenged in the vagina with C. albicans for 12 hours. Number of neutrophils analyzed by flow cytometry and C. albicans by CFU. Data were calculated in at least 3 experiments (n = 7–9 mice per group, Mann-Whitney U test) and expressed as box and whiskers at 10–90 percentiles. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, and ***P < 0.001. Die, diestrus; Pro, proestrus; Est, estrous; Me I, Metestrus I; and Me II, Metestrus II; PMN, polymorphonuclear leukocytes; CFU, colony-forming unit; Vh, vehicle; E2, estradiol; P4, progesterone.

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