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Infection and Immunity, June 2004, p. 3294-3298, Vol. 72, No. 6
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.6.3294-3298.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Neurology, Charité, Humboldt University Berlin, 10098 Berlin,1 Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine, 13092 Berlin,2 Department of Neuropathology, Georg August University, 37075 Göttingen, Germany3
Received 27 October 2003/ Returned for modification 5 January 2004/ Accepted 26 February 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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) in the cerebrospinal fluid. Compared with the values at the beginning of the experiment, intraperitoneal injection of tyrphostin AG 126 reduced the increases in regional cerebral blood flow (at 6 h, 127% ± 14% versus 222% ± 51% of the baseline value; P < 0.05) and intracranial pressure (at 6 h, 0.8 ± 2.4 versus 5.4 ± 2.0 mm of Hg; P < 0.05), the influx of leukocytes (at 6 h, 1,336 ± 737 versus 4,350 ± 2,182 leukocytes/µl; P < 0.05), and the TNF-
concentration (at 6 h, 261 ± 188 versus 873 ± 135 pg/µl; P < 0.05). These results demonstrate that inhibition of AG 126-sensitive tyrosine kinase pathways may provide new approaches for preventing excessive inflammation and reducing the increases in blood flow and intracranial pressure in the acute phase of bacterial meningitis. | INTRODUCTION |
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Two major mechanisms that cause damage in the central nervous system have been proposed: (i) direct toxic effects of pneumococci (5) and (ii) excessive stimulation of the host immune system by the bacterial surface (2, 28). An important stimulus is the multilayered network of peptidoglycan that makes up the pneumococcal cell wall (PCW) (27). Purified PCW induces meningeal inflammation which is comparable to the acute inflammation caused by living bacteria, including the clinical hallmarks of the disease, such as an influx of leukocytes and increases in the intracranial pressure (ICP) and regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) (2, 28, 31). The immunostimulatory effect of cell wall components is clinically important (34) because antibiotic lysis of bacteria induces the release of these components (11). Moreover, the concentration of the cell wall components in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) correlates significantly with the outcome of the disease (23).
It has been shown that heat-killed pneumococci, soluble peptidoglycan, and PCW induce signaling through Toll-like receptor 2 (33, 35). The downstream signaling involves activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) erk 1/2 (p44/42MAPK) and p38, which has been demonstrated in astrocytes (25), microglia (14), and primary cerebral microvascular endothelial cells (33). Inhibition of the MAPK pathway in vitro reduces the production of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-
) and nitric oxide induced by PCW (25). Specific inhibition of a protein tyrosine kinase that also controls MAPK erk 1/2 by tyrphostin AG 126 attenuates the release of proinflammatory cytokines in mouse microglial cells and decreases the number of invading leukocytes in the CSF (14). AG 126 is a selective protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor that interferes with substrate binding rather than with ATP binding by the corresponding kinase.
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors block experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by reducing lymphocyte entry into the central nervous system (7, 8). In a sepsis model AG 126 protects mice against endotoxin toxicity, probably by blocking TNF-
and nitric oxide production (18).
In a well-established rat model of meningitis (19, 31), we induced meningeal inflammation with PCW, a stimulus that obviates any interference by bacterial metabolism and mimics the inflammatory burst caused by bacterial lysis. We tested the effect of AG 126, a protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor, on the detrimental hallmarks of early meningitis, including leukocyte influx, TNF-
production, an increase in the blood flow, and an increase in the ICP.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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The ICP data were expressed as the difference between the value obtained and the value at the beginning of the experiment (in millimeters of Hg), and rCBF data were expressed as a percentage of the baseline value.
At the beginning of each experiment and then at 2-h intervals, blood samples were taken to determine arterial pO2, pCO2, and pH (COMPACT 1; AVL List, Graz, Austria). Leukocytes in the blood and CSF were counted before and after the experiment.
PCW preparation. PCW were purified as described previously (28, 33), with minor modifications. Unencapsulated S. pneumoniae R6 was cultured in chemically defined medium, heat killed, and mechanically disintegrated by using 0.1-mm beads. The suspension was digested with DNase (Promega, Mannheim, Germany) and RNase (U.S. Biochemical Corp., Cleveland, Ohio), treated with trypsin (with 10 mM CaCl2; Sigma-Aldrich Chemie Gmbh), and after centrifugation (23,000 x g, 20 min) resuspended in 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate (Serva, Heidelberg, Germany); this was followed by extensive washing. The purified cell walls were resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline at an optical density at 620 nm of 1 (equivalent to 108 CFU/ml), and stored at 20°C. The composition of PCW has been described previously (15).
Experimental groups. Control animals were inoculated intracisternally with pyrogen-free saline (n = 7), and animals with meningitis were inoculated with PCW (n = 7). Tyrphostin AG 126 (Calbiochem-Novabiochem Corp., San Diego, Calif.), dissolved in 200 µl of dimethyl sulfoxide, was inoculated intraperitoneally 2 h before induction of meningitis (7.5 mg/kg [n = 7] or 15 mg/kg [n = 9]) or 1 h after induction of meningitis (15 mg/kg [n = 6] or 30 mg/kg [n = 4]). In untreated controls 200 µl of dimethyl sulfoxide was injected intraperitoneally (n = 7).
Statistical analysis. All data were expressed as means ± standard deviations. The means of independent groups were compared by one-way analysis of variance and the Student-Newman-Keuls multiple-comparison test and by the Student t test for two groups. A P value of <0.05 was considered significant.
| RESULTS |
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Tyrphostin AG 126 reduced the TNF-
concentrations in the CSF.
TNF-
is thought to be one of the key proinflammatory cytokines in meningitis (1, 17). Pretreatment of animals with meningitis with AG 126 reduced the concentration of TNF-
in the CSF significantly compared to the concentration in untreated animals with meningitis (with 15 mg of AG 126 per kg, 261 ± 188 versus 873 ± 135 pg/ml [P < 0.05]) (Fig. 2D). Posttreatment with 15 mg/kg was not effective, but posttreatment with 30 mg/kg decreased the concentration of TNF-
significantly (188 ± 97 pg/ml [P < 0.05]). The TNF-
levels were not different in controls and AG 126-treated controls (18 ± 3 and 28 ± 10 pg/ml).
AG 126 treatment had no effect on physiological parameters. Body temperature, mean arterial blood pressure, and arterial pH, pO2, and pCO2 were measured every hour, and the values were comparable for all experimental groups (Table 1). Blood leukocytes were counted at the beginning and the end of the experiment, and there were no differences among the groups.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Here we show that specific inhibition of a protein tyrosine kinase, most likely upstream of p42/44MAPK, reduced the increases in the rCBF and ICP, as well as the influx of leukocytes and the TNF-
concentration in the CSF in the acute phase of experimental meningitis.
AG 126 prevented an increase in rCBF, a measure of local vasodilatation, in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, treatment of the animals 1 h after induction of meningitis still inhibited the increase in rCBF. This is consistent with significantly improved hemodynamic parameters seen in tyrphostin-treated animals with multiorgan failure caused by Escherichia coli (26).
Clinically, increased ICP in the acute phase of bacterial meningitis is enormously important and may be attributed to at least three mechanisms (21): (i) vasogenic edema due to extravasation of plasma compounds and hyperemia; (ii) cytotoxic edema caused by toxins released from activated leukocytes (13), glia (20), endothelial cells (12), and bacteria; and (iii) an increase in CSF outflow resistance (22). Decreased ICP in tyrphostin-treated animals may result from attenuated hyperemia, as well as reduced leukocyte recruitment and TNF-
concentrations in the CSF.
Leukocyte influx into the CSF, the hallmark of bacterial meningitis, was significantly reduced in AG 126-treated animals compared to that in untreated animals. Reducing the leukocyte influx is believed to have potential therapeutic benefits because high numbers of leukocytes correlate with an unfavorable outcome (3), and blocking leukocyte invasion attenuates brain edema, an increase in the ICP, hyperemia, and neuronal damage and improves survival in experimental meningitis (4, 29, 32). In a model of zymosan-induced peritonitis AG 126 also inhibited the influx of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in a dose-dependent manner (10). Additionally, protein tyrosine phosphorylation mediates TNF-
-induced endothelial neutrophil adhesion in vitro (16). Autoimmune encephalomyelitis is suppressed by tyrosine kinase inhibitors (6, 7), most likely by inhibition of invasion of the brain parenchyma by leukocytes (8).
TNF-
is thought to be one of the key cytokines in bacterial meningitis, as the level of TNF-
is elevated in the CSF of meningitis patients (30) and in experimental models (17), and it dramatically accelerates experimental pneumococcal meningitis (1). Production of TNF-
requires p42/44MAPK activation, as shown in macrophages (18), astrocytes (25), and microglia (14). AG 126-treated mice survive a lipopolysaccharide-induced lethal shock, and the protection is correlated with decreased TNF-
production (18). Accordingly, AG 126 treatment reduced TNF-
levels in the CSF of animals with meningitis in the present study.
In conclusion, our study showed that an AG 126-sensitive protein tyrosine kinase is important in the early phase of pneumococcal meningitis. AG 126 effectively inhibited blood flow and an increase in the ICP and reduced the leukocyte influx and TNF-
concentration in the CSF. These results suggest that inhibition of selective tyrosine kinase phosphorylation may provide new approaches for decreasing the excessive inflammatory response caused by antibiotic lysis of bacteria and the release of highly inflammatory PCW.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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