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Nature's Nets
29 November 2016

Nature's Nets

This image shows two immune cells known as neutrophils, magnified hundreds of times with a scanning electron microscope. First discovered more than a hundred years ago, they act as the first line of defence in the body, pumping out anti-microbial chemicals and swallowing up bacteria and viruses. But in 2004, high-powered microscopes revealed a third mode of attack: casting out a deadly net of DNA and protein fibres – shown spewing from the right-hand cell in this image – that catches and disarms invading bugs. Formally known as neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), they form localised ‘cages’ that focus germ-fighting power in a small area and avoid causing damage to neighbouring healthy cells. Although this is a powerful infection-beating mechanism, it’s not so good for the neutrophil. Because forming a NET requires the cell to throw out all its DNA – containing all the genetic instructions for life – it dies in the process.

Written by Kat Arney

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