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      Neutrophil Leukocyte: Combustive Microbicidal Action and Chemiluminescence

      review-article
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      Journal of Immunology Research
      Hindawi Publishing Corporation

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          Abstract

          Neutrophil leukocytes protect against a varied and complex array of microbes by providing microbicidal action that is simple, potent, and focused. Neutrophils provide such action via redox reactions that change the frontier orbitals of oxygen (O 2) facilitating combustion. The spin conservation rules define the symmetry barrier that prevents direct reaction of diradical O 2 with nonradical molecules, explaining why combustion is not spontaneous. In burning, the spin barrier is overcome when energy causes homolytic bond cleavage producing radicals capable of reacting with diradical O 2 to yield oxygenated radical products that further participate in reactive propagation. Neutrophil mediated combustion is by a different pathway. Changing the spin quantum state of O 2 removes the symmetry restriction to reaction. Electronically excited singlet molecular oxygen ( 1O 2 *) is a potent electrophilic reactant with a finite lifetime that restricts its radius of reactivity and focuses combustive action on the target microbe. The resulting exergonic dioxygenation reactions produce electronically excited carbonyls that relax by light emission, that is, chemiluminescence. This overview of neutrophil combustive microbicidal action takes the perspectives of spin conservation and bosonic-fermionic frontier orbital considerations. The necessary principles of particle physics and quantum mechanics are developed and integrated into a fundamental explanation of neutrophil microbicidal metabolism.

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          Most cited references50

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          A Molecular Orbital Theory of Reactivity in Aromatic Hydrocarbons

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            The phagocytes: neutrophils and monocytes.

            The production and deployment of phagocytes are central functions of the hematopoietic system. In the 1950s, radioisotopic studies demonstrated the high production rate and short lifespan of neutrophils and allowed researchers to follow the monocytes as they moved from the marrow through the blood to become tissue macrophages, histiocytes, and dendritic cells. Subsequently, the discovery of the colony-stimulating factors greatly improved understanding the regulation of phagocyte production. The discovery of the microbicidal myeloperoxidase-H2O2-halide system and the importance of NADPH oxidase to the generation of H2O2 also stimulated intense interest in phagocyte disorders. More recent research has focused on membrane receptors and the dynamics of the responses of phagocytes to external factors including immunoglobulins, complement proteins, cytokines, chemokines, integrins, and selectins. Phagocytes express toll-like receptors that aid in the clearance of a wide range of microbial pathogens and their products. Phagocytes are also important sources of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines, thus participating in host defenses through a variety of mechanisms. Over the last 50 years, many genetic and molecular disorders of phagocytes have been identified, leading to improved diagnosis and treatment of conditions which predispose patients to the risk of recurrent fevers and infectious diseases.
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              The Nature of The Chemical Bond

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Immunol Res
                J Immunol Res
                JIR
                Journal of Immunology Research
                Hindawi Publishing Corporation
                2314-8861
                2314-7156
                2015
                13 December 2015
                : 2015
                : 794072
                Affiliations
                Department of Pathology, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, NE 68131, USA
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: Carlos Rosales

                Article
                10.1155/2015/794072
                4691466
                71cda4c3-acc0-4c0b-854d-c50136c291bf
                Copyright © 2015 Robert C. Allen.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 15 August 2015
                : 18 November 2015
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