Legionella pneumophila growth restriction in permissive macrophages cocultured with nonpermissive lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophages
Autor: | Cathy Newton, Herman Friedman, Thomas W. Klein, Satoru Arata |
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Rok vydání: | 1993 |
Předmět: |
Lipopolysaccharides
Lipopolysaccharide Mice Inbred A Adipose tissue macrophages Immunology Spleen Cell Communication Microbiology Legionella pneumophila Interferon-gamma Mice chemistry.chemical_compound Interferon medicine Animals Macrophage Interleukin 6 Polymyxin B biology Interleukin-6 Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha Macrophages Macrophage Activation biology.organism_classification Recombinant Proteins Infectious Diseases medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry Thioglycolates biology.protein Female Parasitology Tumor necrosis factor alpha Research Article Interleukin-1 medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Infection and Immunity. 61:5056-5061 |
ISSN: | 1098-5522 0019-9567 |
Popis: | Macrophages can be activated by lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria to evince a number of biological activities, including increased resistance to intracellular infection by opportunistic bacteria. In the present study, intraperitoneal injection of LPS into A/J mice activated peritoneal macrophages so that they resisted subsequent in vitro infection with Legionella pneumophila. Coculture of these macrophages with those from nontreated A/J mice converted the entire population of cells from permissive to nonpermissive. This effect did not appear to be mediated by soluble factors released from the LPS-treated macrophages, since the levels of interleukins-1 and -6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha produced by the macrophages were not found to be markedly elevated at the time when the macrophages from the LPS-treated mice were most effective in converting normal macrophages to nonpermissiveness. Furthermore, macrophages from mice injected intraperitoneally with either interferon or tumor necrosis factor alpha did not evince nonpermissiveness and also did not have the ability to convert normal spleen cells to nonpermissiveness. Polymyxin B, a known inactivator of LPS activity, did not inhibit the macrophages from the LPS-treated mice from inducing this resistance. It seemed unlikely that free LPS released from the macrophages mediated this effect. The results of this study thus showed that macrophages activated by LPS in vivo can evince nonpermissiveness for Legionella growth in vitro and also can induce macrophages from normal, permissive mice to become nonpermissive for Legionella growth in vitro. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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