Baleeiro Carlos E O, Christensen Paul J, Morris Susan B, Mendez Michael P, Wilcoxen Steven E, Paine Robert
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, USA.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol. 2006 Dec;291(6):L1246-55. doi: 10.1152/ajplung.00016.2006. Epub 2006 Aug 4.
We have previously demonstrated that mice exposed to sublethal hyperoxia (an atmosphere of >95% oxygen for 4 days, followed by return to room air) have significantly impaired pulmonary innate immune response. Alveolar macrophages (AM) from hyperoxia-exposed mice exhibit significantly diminished antimicrobial activity and markedly reduced production of inflammatory cytokines in response to stimulation with LPS compared with AM from control mice in normoxia. As a consequence of these defects, mice exposed to sublethal hyperoxia are more susceptible to lethal pneumonia with Klebsiella pneumoniae than control mice. Granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a growth factor produced by normal pulmonary alveolar epithelial cells that is critically involved in maintenance of normal AM function. We now report that sublethal hyperoxia in vivo leads to greatly reduced alveolar epithelial cell GM-CSF expression. Systemic treatment of mice with recombinant murine GM-CSF during hyperoxia exposure preserved AM function, as indicated by cell surface Toll-like receptor 4 expression and by inflammatory cytokine secretion following stimulation with LPS ex vivo. Treatment of hyperoxic mice with GM-CSF significantly reduced lung bacterial burden following intratracheal inoculation with K. pneumoniae, returning lung bacterial colony-forming units to the level of normoxic controls. These data point to a critical role for continuous GM-CSF activity in the lung in maintenance of normal AM function and demonstrate that lung injury due to hyperoxic stress results in significant impairment in pulmonary innate immunity through suppression of alveolar epithelial cell GM-CSF expression.
我们之前已经证明,暴露于亚致死性高氧环境(95%以上氧气的环境中4天,随后恢复至室内空气环境)的小鼠,其肺部固有免疫反应显著受损。与正常氧环境下对照小鼠的肺泡巨噬细胞(AM)相比,暴露于高氧环境的小鼠的AM表现出显著降低的抗菌活性,并且在受到脂多糖刺激时炎症细胞因子的产生明显减少。由于这些缺陷,暴露于亚致死性高氧环境的小鼠比对照小鼠更容易死于肺炎克雷伯菌引起的致命性肺炎。粒细胞/巨噬细胞集落刺激因子(GM-CSF)是由正常肺泡上皮细胞产生的一种生长因子,对维持正常AM功能至关重要。我们现在报告,体内亚致死性高氧会导致肺泡上皮细胞GM-CSF表达大幅降低。在高氧暴露期间用重组小鼠GM-CSF对小鼠进行全身治疗可保留AM功能,这通过细胞表面Toll样受体4表达以及体外脂多糖刺激后的炎症细胞因子分泌得以体现。用GM-CSF治疗高氧小鼠可显著降低气管内接种肺炎克雷伯菌后的肺部细菌负荷,使肺部细菌集落形成单位恢复到正常氧环境对照的水平。这些数据表明肺部持续的GM-CSF活性在维持正常AM功能中起关键作用,并证明高氧应激导致的肺损伤通过抑制肺泡上皮细胞GM-CSF表达,从而显著损害肺部固有免疫。