Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol., Vol 13, No. 2, 08 1995, 152-160.
Neutrophil response to endotoxin in the adult respiratory distress syndrome: role of CD14
PE Parsons, MM Gillespie, EE Moore, FA Moore and GS Worthen
Department of Medicine, Denver General Hospital, CO 80204, USA.
The role of both endotoxin and neutrophils in the development of acute lung
injury continues to be debated. We hypothesized that early in the course of
the development of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
circulating neutrophils could be primed by endotoxin and that subsequent
stimulated responses could be enhanced. Accordingly, neutrophils were
isolated from patients at risk for and with ARDS. Unstimulated neutrophils
from these patients neither produced nor were primed for superoxide
production. Whereas phorbol myristate acetate- stimulated superoxide
production was preserved, indicating that the cells were capable of a
response, patient neutrophils produced less superoxide than did cells from
normal subjects when primed with endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) and
stimulated with formyl- methionyl-leucine-phenylalanine (FMLP), suggesting
that there was a defect in the signal transduction mechanism for LPS. This
was confirmed by the finding that patient neutrophils also had both
decreased baseline CD14 expression and less CD14 upregulation after LPS
stimulation compared with neutrophils from normal subjects. The mechanisms
that could account for the decreased CD14 expression were studied in vitro.
Neutrophils from normal subjects both upregulate CD14 in response to LPS
and shed CD14 over time, suggesting that in patients CD14 receptors could
have been previously upregulated and shed. In addition, there is an
association between CD14 expression and retention such that normal
LPS-stimulated neutrophils which are not retained in a filtration system
have decreased CD14 expression. Thus, in patients, those PMN most
responsive to LPS could be preferentially sequestered and not available in
the circulation for study.
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Copyright © 1995 American Thoracic Society.
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