NSAS Idea Suggestion #21 - The Amazing World Of Neutrophils

In this series I propose daily ideas for new members who are interested in becoming #steemstem authors.

NSAS: New STEM Authors Support

I will post an idea a dayish (it is the goal to post daily, but again real life>steemit for now). With this idea I will include a short description about aspects you may be interested in. If you read this idea proposal, and you like it, and you want to write about it:

Go to the comments and write: "I, username, claim this idea"

Obviously "username" is where you write your own username. This is so that I know who is interested in @steemstem and science in general and I am always looking for a good read. This is honor system stuff, so please respect someone claiming an idea. Again, this is just the first step towards writing a good science post. There is more to it. Do your research, use scientific sources and try to use some proper language and attractive design.
This series will have their own hashtag #nsas, so that you can go back and sort through some of the ideas I have shared and what people made out of it. If you decide to use the idea I propose, please also include #nsas on your posts so that I can have a look at it and maybe get you connected in the steemstem group.
Please also visit @steemstem on steemit as well as on Discord. Follow the guidelines and appreciate the community. That means engage, upvote and comment until your fingers bleed.

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The Amazing World Of Neutrophiles

This post was mainly inspired by a picture I saw in my microbiology book about Neutrophil Extracellular Traps (I would have shared this but copyright...). Anyways, what you see is a dense network of protruding fibers that trapped a bacterium. It is an immune response, in which the neutrophil undergoes a very rare form of cell death by basically bursting and shooting out its DNA which has bound antimicrobial agents. My knowledge with these is limited because we did not talk about them in lecture and I am right in the middle of finals week/graduating so I did not have time to read much about this.
For this idea, I propose that you go and write a short introduction about neutrophils - What are they, what is their role in our body, how are they made. It seems that they also play a role in autoimmune diseases, so that is another aspect worth taking a loot at. You could highlight the NET formation and function and outline their role in immunity. Here are some links to open source journal articles. Depending on your background, you may have access to more sources. NET and neutrophils have been researched a lot and there are quite a few articles out there.

  • Neutrophil extracellular traps: Is immunity the second function of chromatin? - Link
  • Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in autoimmune diseases: A comprehensive review - Link
  • Impaired neutrophil extracellular trap (NET) formation: a novel innate immune deficiency of human neonates Link
  • Neutrophil Extracellular Traps and Its Implications in Inflammation: An Overview - Link
  • Neutrophil extracellular traps (Overview on ScienceDirect) - Link

This idea would be most appropriate for someone with experiences in microbiology or medicine. You would more or less write a review article (obviously much lesser scale than an actual review). The priority should be to write it understandable, meaning, do not just throw technical terms at the reader to show how smart you are, but try to engage your reader and try to make them curious about science.

Previous Idea Suggestions:

Helpful Links

  • How To Find Scientific Sources For Free - Post
  • SteemSTEM Guidelines - Link
  • Everything You Need to Know about Uploading Images on Steemit [Tutorial & MarkDown] – Link - by @katerinaramm

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As always,
Cheers @lesshorrible!

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