“…Indeed, as a result of impairments in several defensive strategies such as phagocytosis (Wenisch et al ., 2000; Butcher et al ., 2001), degranulation (McLaughlin et al ., 1986) and ROS production (Fulop et al ., 2004), the microbicidal activity of neutrophils from older adults is markedly reduced (Wenisch et al ., 2000; Simell et al ., 2011). Recently, Tseng and colleagues (Tseng et al ., 2012) made the novel observation that NET formation is also impaired with age, with the group demonstrating neutrophils from aged mice generated significantly fewer NETs when challenged with Staphylococcus aureus (Tseng et al ., 2012). In vivo , this defect in NET generation was associated with marked bacteraemia, leading the group to hypothesize that aberrant NET formation may explain why older adults are more susceptible to invasive bacterial disease following skin and soft tissue infection (Tseng et al ., 2012).…”