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Journal of Innate Immunity 2017

In vivo Lipopolysaccharide Tolerance Recruits CD11b+ Macrophages to the Liver with Enhanced Bactericidal Activity and Low Tumor Necrosis Factor-Releasing Capability, Resulting in Drastic Resistance to Lethal Septicemia.

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Manabu Kinoshita
Hiromi Miyazaki
Hiroyuki Nakashima
Masahiro Nakashima
Makoto Nishikawa
Takuya Ishikiriyama
Shoichiro Kato
Keiichi Iwaya
Sadayuki Hiroi
Nariyoshi Shinomiya

Mots clés

Abstrait

In vivo lipopolysaccharide (LPS) tolerance on bacterial infection was investigated, focusing on liver macrophages.

LPS tolerance was induced by intraperitoneal injections with 5 μg/kg of LPS for 3 consecutive days, and then mice were intravenously infected with Escherichia coli.

All LPS-primed mice survived lethal bacterial infection. Drastic enhancement of bactericidal activity of liver macrophages strongly contributed to bacterial clearance. Although LPS-primed mice produced substantial amounts of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inside the liver, TNF efflux into the systemic circulation was markedly suppressed. These mice showed a dramatic increase in CD11b+ monocyte- derived macrophages in the liver. The CD11b+ macrophages that increased in LPS-primed mice were those with strong phagocytic/bactericidal activity and an upregulated expression of Fcγ receptor I, but the subfraction with a potent TNF-producing capacity and poor phagocytic activity diminished. The adoptive transfer of CD11b+ macrophages from LPS-primed mice to control mice increased survival after bacterial infection and reduced the elevation of plasma TNF. LPS priming did not affect the CD68+ resident Kupffer cells, and CD68+ Kupffer cell-depleted mice still exhibited LPS tolerance with strong resistance to bacteremia.

LPS tolerance recruits CD11b+ macrophages to the liver with enhanced bactericidal activity, which plays a central role in resistance to lethal bacteremia.

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