Science Inventory

EFFECT OF INHALED ENDOTOXIN ON AIRWAY AND CIRCULATING INFLAMMATORY CELL PHAGOCYTOSIS AND CD11B EXPRESSION IN ATOPIC ASTHMATIC SUBJECTS

Citation:

Alexis, N. E., M. W. Eldridge, AND D. B. Peden. EFFECT OF INHALED ENDOTOXIN ON AIRWAY AND CIRCULATING INFLAMMATORY CELL PHAGOCYTOSIS AND CD11B EXPRESSION IN ATOPIC ASTHMATIC SUBJECTS. JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY. Mosby, Inc., 112(2):353-361, (2003).

Description:

Effect of inhaled endotoxin on airway and circulating inflammatory cell phagocytosis and CD11b expression in atopic asthmatic subjects

Neil E. Alexis, PhD, Marlowe W. Eldridge, MD, David B. Peden, MD, MS

Chapel Hill and Research Triangle Park, NC

Background: In a cohort of 8 normal and 10 allergic asthmatic volunteers, we previously reported that inhalation of 5 ?g of endotoxin (LPS) induced airway inflammation that correlated with CD14 expression that was, in turn, correlated with eosinophil
numbers in the airway. Macrophage and neutrophil functions have been reported to be modified by endotoxin in vitro and in vivo, and response to endotoxin is mediated largely by airway phagocytes and related to allergic inflammation.
Objective: We sought to examine functional and cell-surface phenotype changes in phagocytes recovered from atopic asthmatic subjects after endotoxin challenge.
Methods: Sputum and peripheral blood from 10 allergic asthmatic subjects was recovered after saline and LPS challenge. Assessment of phagocytosis and cell-surface phenotype (CD11b, CD14, and CD64) was performed on phagocytes obtained from
sputum (n = 7) and blood samples (n = 10).
Results: Phagocytosis of blood and sputum phagocytes was blunted after LPS challenge in a fashion that correlated with the increase in airway neutrophils after LPS challenge. Cell-surface expression of CD14 (membrane-bound CD14) was increased in
sputum cells, whereas CD11b was decreased in sputum and circulating phagocytes. Baseline expression of CD11b in blood correlated with the magnitude of the neutrophil response after LPS inhalation, as well as (inversely) with baseline airway eosinophil
levels.
Conclusions: Inhalation of endotoxin at levels adequate to induce a neutrophil influx to the airways (but not systemic symptoms) results in decreased phagocytosis in both airway and circulating cells and modifies CD11b expression in a way that implicates its
involvement in phagocyte responsiveness to inhaled LPS. (J Allergy Clin Immunol 2003;112:353-61.)

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:08/22/2003
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 80419