Author:
Bozinovski Steven,Jones Jessica,Beavitt Sarah-Jane,Cook Andrew D.,Hamilton John A.,Anderson Gary P.
Abstract
The innate immune inflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS, an endotoxin) is essential for lung host defense against infection by gram-negative bacteria but is also implicated in the pathogenesis of some lung diseases. Studies on genetically altered mice implicate granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in lung responses to LPS; however, the physiological effects of GM-CSF neutralization are poorly characterized. We performed detailed kinetic and dose-response analyses of the lung inflammation response to LPS in the presence of the specific GM-CSF-neutralizing antibody 22E9. LPS instilled into the lungs of BALB/c mice induced a dose-dependent inflammation comprised of intense neutrophilia, macrophage infiltration and proliferation, TNF-α and matrix metalloproteinase release, and macrophage inflammatory protein-2 induction. The neutralization of anti-GM-CSF in a dose-dependent fashion suppressed these inflammatory indexes by ≤85% when given before or after LPS or after repeat LPS challenges. Here we report for the first time that the physiological expression of Toll-like receptor-4 in lung is reduced by anti-GM-CSF. We observed that lower Toll-like receptor-4 expression correlated with a similar decline in peak TNF-α levels in response to endotoxin. Consequently, sustained expression of key inflammatory mediators over 24 h was reduced. These data expand the understanding of the contribution of GM-CSF to innate immune responses in lung and suggest that blocking GM-CSF might benefit some lung diseases where LPS has been implicated in etiology.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
99 articles.
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