Heremans H, Dillen C, van Damme J, Billiau A
Laboratory of Immunobiology, Rega Institute, University of Leuven, Medical School, Belgium.
Eur J Immunol. 1994 May;24(5):1155-60. doi: 10.1002/eji.1830240522.
Observations in our laboratory have provided evidence that interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) is a key regulator of inflammatory responses to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (Heremans et al., J. Exp. Med. 1990. 171: 1853): treatment of mice with neutralizing monoclonal antibody against IFN-gamma was found to completely prevent lethal shock reactions, in particular the generalized Shwartzman reaction, whereas treatment with IFN-gamma sensitized the mice to the development of such reactions. Since activated T cells and natural killer (NK) cells are the main if not the only potential source of LPS-induced IFN-gamma, we investigated the relative importance of these cells in the development of the generalized Shwartzman-like reaction in mice by depleting them selectively with relevant monoclonal antibodies. Treatment with antibodies directed against the CD4+ T cells subset was not effective in protecting mice. Anti-CD8 antibody did attenuate the reaction to some extent. However, markedly reduced mortality was seen in mice which were depleted of NK cells by systemic administration of polyclonal anti-asialo GM1 or monoclonal anti-NK1.1 antibodies. Failure of T cells to promote the Shwartzman reaction was also evidenced by the observation that thymus-less nude mice, which are deficient in T cells, were more rather than less sensitive to the reaction. Approximately 20 times less LPS was needed to induce the lethal reaction in these mice than in NMRI mice and 58 times more anti-IFN-gamma antibody was required to block mortality. Nu/nu mice reportedly have an over-active NK cell compartiment. IFN-gamma production by these cells in LPS-treated mice may account for the augmented sensitivity. Our data suggest that NK cells may be the most important source of endogenous IFN-gamma which mediates the LPS-induced lethal reactions in mice.
我们实验室的观察结果表明,γ干扰素(IFN-γ)是对细菌脂多糖(LPS)炎症反应的关键调节因子(赫雷曼斯等人,《实验医学杂志》,1990年。171:1853):发现用抗IFN-γ的中和单克隆抗体治疗小鼠可完全预防致死性休克反应,特别是全身性施瓦茨曼反应,而用IFN-γ治疗则使小鼠对这种反应的发生更敏感。由于活化的T细胞和自然杀伤(NK)细胞是LPS诱导的IFN-γ的主要(如果不是唯一)潜在来源,我们通过用相关单克隆抗体选择性地清除它们,研究了这些细胞在小鼠全身性施瓦茨曼样反应发生中的相对重要性。用针对CD4+T细胞亚群的抗体治疗对保护小鼠无效。抗CD8抗体在一定程度上确实减轻了反应。然而,通过全身给予多克隆抗去唾液酸GM1或单克隆抗NK1.1抗体清除NK细胞的小鼠死亡率显著降低。无胸腺裸鼠缺乏T细胞,对该反应更敏感而非不敏感,这一观察结果也证明了T细胞不能促进施瓦茨曼反应。与NMRI小鼠相比,诱导这些小鼠发生致死反应所需的LPS量大约少20倍,而阻断死亡率所需的抗IFN-γ抗体则多58倍。据报道,裸鼠的NK细胞区室过度活跃。LPS处理的小鼠中这些细胞产生的IFN-γ可能是敏感性增强的原因。我们的数据表明,NK细胞可能是内源性IFN-γ的最重要来源,它介导了LPS诱导的小鼠致死反应。