Literature DB >> 11292757

Fas-mediated apoptosis of neutrophils in sera of patients with infection.

I E Nwakoby1, K Reddy, P Patel, N Shah, S Sharma, M Bhaskaran, N Gibbons, A A Kapasi, P C Singhal.   

Abstract

In the presence of infection, neutropenia is considered to be a marker of poor prognosis; conversely, neutrophilia may not be a determinant of a better prognosis. Since apoptotic neutrophils are compromised functionally, we evaluated the effect of infection on neutrophil apoptosis. The rate of apoptosis was greater for neutrophils isolated from patients with infection than for healthy controls. Escherichia coli did not directly modulate the rate of neutrophil apoptosis. However, sera from infected patients promoted (P < 0.001) neutrophil apoptosis. Interestingly, the sera of patients with different types of infection (gram negative, gram positive, or culture negative) exerted a more or less identical response on neutrophil apoptosis. Sera of infected patients showed a fivefold greater content of FasL compared to controls. Moreover, anti-FasL antibody partly attenuated the infected-serum-induced neutrophil apoptosis. In in vitro studies, E. coli enhanced monocyte FasL expression. Moreover, conditioned media prepared from activated macrophages from control mice showed enhanced apoptosis of human as well as mouse neutrophils. On the contrary, conditioned media prepared from activated macrophages isolated from FasL-deficient mice induced only a mild degree of neutrophil apoptosis. These results suggest that neutrophils in patients with infection undergo apoptosis at an accelerated rate. Infection not only promoted monocyte expression of FasL but also increased FasL content of the serum. Because the functional status of apoptotic cells is compromised, a significant number of neutrophils may not be participating in the body's defense. Since neutrophils play the most important role in innate immunity, their compromised status in the presence of infection may transfer the host defense burden from an innate response to acquired immunity. The present study provides some insight into the lack of correlation between neutrophilia and the outcome of infection.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11292757      PMCID: PMC98293          DOI: 10.1128/IAI.69.5.3343-3349.2001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Immun        ISSN: 0019-9567            Impact factor:   3.441


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