Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Infection and Immunity, August 2000, p. 4422-4429, Vol. 68, No. 8
Departments of Basic Medical
Science1 and
Anesthesiology,2 School of Medicine,
University of Missouri at Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri 64108;
Office of Research Administration, Saint Luke's Hospital,
Kansas City, Missouri 641113; and
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas
661604
Received 9 February 2000/Returned for modification 22 March
2000/Accepted 3 May 2000
Viable Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus
aureus bacteria elicited markedly different in vitro tumor
necrosis factor alpha (TNF-
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Differential Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha Expression
and Release from Peritoneal Mouse Macrophages In Vitro in Response to
Proliferating Gram-Positive versus Gram-Negative Bacteria
) responses when placed in coculture with
peritoneal murine macrophages. These include quantitative differences
in TNF-
mRNA expression and corresponding protein product secretion
as well as kinetic differences in the profiles of the TNF-
responses. Further, lipopolysaccharide (from E. coli) is a
major contributing factor to these differences, as revealed by
comparative experiments with endotoxin-responsive (C3Heb/FeJ) and
endotoxin-hyporesponsive (C3H/HeJ) macrophages. Nevertheless, the
eventual overall magnitude of the TNF-
secretion of macrophages in
response to S. aureus was at least equivalent to that
observed with E. coli, while appearing at time periods
hours later than the E. coli-elicited TNF-
response. Both the magnitude and kinetic profile of the TNF-
responses were
found to be relatively independent of the rate of bacterial proliferation, at least to the extent that similar results were observed with both viable and paraformaldehyde-killed microbes. Nevertheless, S. aureus treated in culture with the
carbapenem antibiotic imipenem manifests markedly altered profiles of
TNF-
response, with the appearance of an early TNF-
peak not seen with viable organisms, a finding strikingly similar to that recently reported by our laboratory from in vivo studies (R. Silverstein, J. G. Wood, Q. Xue, M. Norimatsu, D. L. Horn, and D. C. Morrison, Infect. Immun. 68:2301-2308, 2000). In contrast, imipenem
treatment of E. coli-cocultured macrophages does not
significantly alter the observed TNF-
response either in vitro or in
vivo. In conclusion, our data support the concept that the host
inflammatory response of cultured mouse macrophages in response to
viable gram-positive versus gram-negative microbes exhibits distinctive
characteristics and that these distinctions are, under some conditions,
altered on subsequent bacterial killing, depending on the mode of
killing. Of potential importance, these distinctive in vitro TNF-
profiles faithfully reflect circulating levels of TNF-
in infected
mice. These results suggest that coculture of peritoneal macrophages with viable versus antibiotic-killed bacteria and subsequent assessment of cytokine response (TNF-
) may be of value in clarifying, and ultimately controlling, related host inflammatory responses in septic patients.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Kansas Medical
Center, Kansas City, KS 66160. Phone: (913) 588-6954. Fax: (913)
588-7440. E-mail: rsilvers{at}kumc.edu.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| J. Bacteriol. | J. Virol. | Eukaryot. Cell |
|---|
| Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. | Clin. Vaccine Immunol. | All ASM Journals |
|---|