Role of Plasma, Lipopolysaccharide-Binding Protein, and CD14 in Response of Mouse Peritoneal Exudate Macrophages to Endotoxin

Author:

Heumann Didier1,Adachi Yoshiyuki2,Le Roy Didier1,Ohno Naohito2,Yadomae Toshiro2,Glauser Michel Pierre1,Calandra Thierry1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Infectious Diseases, CHUV, Lausanne, Switzerland,1 and

2. Laboratory of Immunopharmacology of Microbial Products, Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Science, Tokyo, Japan2

Abstract

ABSTRACT Plasma lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding protein (LBP) and membrane CD14 function to enhance the responses of monocytes to low concentrations of endotoxin. Surprisingly, recent reports have suggested that LBP or CD14 may be dispensable for macrophage responses to low concentrations of LPS or may even exert an inhibitory effect in the case of LBP. We therefore investigated whether LBP and CD14 participated in the response of mouse peritoneal exudate macrophages (PEM) to LPS stimulation. In the presence of a low amount of plasma (<1%) or of recombinant mouse or human LBP, PEM were found to respond to low concentrations of LPS (<5 to 10 ng/ml) in an LBP- and CD14-dependent manner. However, tumor necrosis factor production (not interleukin-6 production) by LPS-stimulated PEM was reduced when cells were stimulated in the presence of higher concentrations of plasma or serum (5 or 10%). Yet, the inhibitory effect of plasma or serum was not mediated by LBP. Taken together with previous results obtained with LBP and CD14 knockout mice in models of experimental endotoxemia, the present data confirm a critical part for LBP and CD14 in innate immune responses of both blood monocytes and tissue macrophages to endotoxins.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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