Human & experimental toxicology
-
Comparative Study
Differential inhibition of inflammatory cytokine release from cultured alveolar macrophages from smokers and non-smokers by NO2.
Human alveolar macrophages (AMs) obtained from smokers and non-smokers by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were subjected to various concentrations of NO2 in an inverted monolayer exposure model. Culture supernatants were collected 4 h after the exposure and assayed for secreted TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-8 and MIP-1 alpha. The steady state levels of the mRNAs for these cytokines were also analysed in the cells. ⋯ The data suggest that macrophage-derived cytokine mediators of the sepsis response may not play a role in the generation of NO2-induced inflammation in the human lung. Conversely, the gas seems to non-specifically inhibit the release and/or production of cytokines, particularly from smoker's cells, at the post-transcriptional level, and impairs the ability of the cells to increase the transcription and release of the cytokines in response to bacterial LPS. The fact that NO2 seriously impaired the already diminished capacity of smoker's cells to release several important pro-inflammatory cytokines, both under control conditions and in response to LPS, strongly suggest that the inhalation of NO2 in cigarette smoke may contribute to impairing host defence against infection in the lung.