Published ahead of print on June 1, 2006, doi:10.1164/rccm.200502-276OC Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Volume 174, Number 6, September 2006, 689-698 A more recent version of this article appeared on September 15, 2006
Submitted on February 20, 2005 Neutrophil Cytoskeletal Rearrangements during Capillary Sequestration in Bacterial Pneumonia in RatsKazuo Yoshida1,1 Department of Pediatrics, Division of Integrative Biology, Case Western Reserve University and Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, OH, United States * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cmd22{at}case.edu.
Rationale: Neutrophils accumulate in pulmonary capillaries during acute inflammation. Initial events in injury recognition and sequestration do not occur through selectin-mediated rolling. Cytoskeletal rearrangements, as assessed by submembrane F-actin rims, result in poorly deformable neutrophils that may not pass through capillaries. Objective: To test the hypothesis that neutrophils sequestering during pneumonia contain F-actin rims and to determine the roles of CD11/CD18, L-selectin expression, and neutrophil-platelet adhesion in neutrophil sequestration. Methods: Neutrophils were compared in blood obtained simultaneously from venous and arterial sites before and 4 hours after instillation of S. pneumoniae or E. coli in rats. Measurements and Main Results: At 4 hr of pneumonia, the number of neutrophils was greater in the venous blood entering the lungs than arterial blood leaving the lungs, indicating that neutrophil sequestration was occurring. More neutrophils entering the lungs contained F-actin rims than neutrophils exiting, and the venous-arterial difference in F-actin rimmed neutrophil counts completely accounted for sequestration. In E. coli pneumonia where neutrophil adhesion is mediated by CD11/CD18, CD18 blockade 15 min before blood samples were obtained did not prevent this sequestration of F-actin rimmed neutrophils. Neutrophils expressing high or low levels of L-selectin or of neutrophils that bound platelets while circulating did not preferentially sequester. Conclusions: Neutrophils with cytoskeletal rearrangements preferentially sequester within the lungs during pneumonia, and this sequestration is not due to CD11/CD18-mediated adhesion, L-selectin expression, or platelet adhesion to neutrophils, suggesting that cytoskeletal rearrangements result in sequestration of neutrophils. Key words: acute inflammation, pulmonary infection, neutrophil recruitment, cytoskeleton, adhesion molecules
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||