Journal of leukocyte biology
-
Nuclear factor (NF)-kappa B expression and dimer characteristics were studied in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of major-trauma patients and healthy controls. Analysis of PBMCs on days 1, 3, 5, and 10 after trauma revealed that expression of both p65p50 heterodimers and p50p50 homodimers was significantly reduced compared with that in controls. In vitro lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimulation of PBMCs induced NF-kappa B translocation. ⋯ LPS did not induce I kappa B expression in PBMCs from trauma patients, but strong induction was obtained with staphylococci, suggesting that this defect is not universal and depends on the nature of the activating signal. Although no direct correlation was found between levels of interleukin-10 or transforming growth factor-beta and NF-kappa B, these immunosuppressive cytokines were significantly elevated in trauma patients by 10 days after admission. The long-term low-basal and LPS-induced nuclear translocation of NF-kappa B recalled long-term immunoparalysis observed in patients with severe inflammatory stress such as trauma.
-
Pulmonary infections are important causes of morbidity and mortality in immunosuppressed patients after transplantation. After experimental irradiation and syngeneic bone marrow transplantation in mice, macrophages show reduced repopulation in the lung compared with that in other tissues. Macrophages are major microbicidal immune effector cells in host pulmonary defense. ⋯ The M-CSF treatment had no effect on virus load in the lung tissue. However, phosphate-buffered saline-treated mice seemed to develop stronger inflammation after viral infection than M-CSF-treated mice. We conclude that local M-CSF treatment modulates cellular inflammation in the lung during immunosuppression.