The Journal of immunology : official journal of the American Association of Immunologists
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Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARgamma) is a metabolic regulator that plays an important role in sensitizing tissues to the action of insulin and in normalizing serum glucose and free fatty acids in type 2 diabetic patients. The receptor has also been implicated in the modulation of inflammatory responses, and ligands of PPARgamma have been found to induce apoptosis in lymphocytes. However, apoptosis induction may not depend on the receptor, because high doses of PPARgamma agonists are required for this process. ⋯ In cytokine-deprived cells, PPARgamma attenuates the decline in ATP level and suppresses accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Moreover, PPARgamma regulates ROS through its coordinated transcriptional control of proteins and enzymes involved in ROS scavenging, including uncoupling protein 2, catalase, and copper zinc superoxide dismutase. Our studies identify cell survival promotion as a novel activity of PPARgamma and suggest that PPARgamma may modulate cytokine withdrawal-induced activated T cell death.
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T and B lymphocytes have been implicated in the pathogenesis of renal ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI). The trafficking of lymphocytes into kidneys during IRI has been postulated to underlie this effect, but has not been rigorously studied. We therefore characterized the lymphocyte populations infiltrating into mouse kidneys 3 and 24 h after renal IRI. ⋯ Increased TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma production of kidney infiltration CD3+ T cells in IRI mice but not sham-operated mice was found. Unexpectedly, isolation and transfer of kidney-infiltrating lymphocytes 24 h after renal IRI into T cell-deficient mice reduced their functional and histological injury after renal IRI, suggesting that kidney-infiltrating lymphocytes could have a protective function. These quantitative, qualitative, and functional changes in kidney lymphocytes provide mechanistic insight into how lymphocytes modulate IRI, as well as demonstrating that abdominal surgery alone leads to lymphocyte changes in kidney.
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Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response resulting from local infection due, at least in part, to impaired neutrophil migration. IL-12 and IL-18 play an important role in neutrophil migration. We have investigated the mechanism and relative role of IL-12 and IL-18 in polymicrobial sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) in mice. ⋯ Thus we show that IL-12, but not IL-18, is critical to an efficient host defense in polymicrobial sepsis. IL-12 acts through induction of IFN-gamma and stimulation of phagocytic and microbicidal activities of neutrophils, rather than neutrophil migration per se. Our data therefore provide further insight into the defense mechanism against this critical area of infectious disease.