4.5 Article

Roles of neutrophils in the regulation of the extent of human inflammation through delivery of IL-1 and clearance of chemokines

Journal

JOURNAL OF LEUKOCYTE BIOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 1, Pages 7-19

Publisher

FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1189/jlb.0512250

Keywords

Toll-like receptor; endotoxin; neutrophil elastase; Interleukin-8; intradermal

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council [G0801983]
  2. Asthma UK Research grant [07-12]
  3. Sheffield NIHR Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit
  4. Wellcome Trust [076,945]
  5. Wellcome Intermediate Clinical Fellowship [078,244]
  6. U.S. National Institutes of Health [AI18797]
  7. MRC [G0801983] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. Medical Research Council [G0801983] Funding Source: researchfish

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This study examined the establishment of neutrophilic inflammation in humans. We tested the hypotheses that neutrophil recruitment was associated with local CXCL8 production and that neutrophils themselves might contribute to the regulation of the size of the inflammatory response. Humans were challenged i.d. with endotoxin. Biopsies of these sites were examined for cytokine production and leukocyte recruitment by qPCR and IHC. Additional in vitro models of inflammation examined the ability of neutrophils to produce and sequester cytokines relevant to neutrophilic inflammation. i.d. challenge with 15 ng of a TLR4-selective endotoxin caused a local inflammatory response, in which 1% of the total biopsy area stained positive for neutrophils at 6 h, correlating with 100-fold up-regulation in local CXCL8 mRNA generation. Neutrophils themselves were the major source of the early cytokine IL-1 beta. In vitro, neutrophils mediated CXCL8 but not IL-1 beta clearance (>90% clearance of <= 2 nM CXCL8 over 24 h). CXCL8 clearance was at least partially receptor-dependent and modified by inflammatory context, preserved in models of viral infection but reduced in models of bacterial infection. In conclusion, in a human inflammatory model, neutrophils are rapidly recruited and may regulate the size and outcome of the inflammatory response through the uptake and release of cytokines and chemokines in pat-terns dependent on the underlying inflammatory stimulus. J. Leukoc. Biol. 93: 7-19; 2013.

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