| Literature DB >> 12617738 |
Steven M Opal1, Charles T Esmon.
Abstract
The innate immune response system is designed to alert the host rapidly to the presence of an invasive microbial pathogen that has breached the integument of multicellular eukaryotic organisms. Microbial invasion poses an immediate threat to survival, and a vigorous defense response ensues in an effort to clear the pathogen from the internal milieu of the host. The innate immune system is able to eradicate many microbial pathogens directly, or innate immunity may indirectly facilitate the removal of pathogens by activation of specific elements of the adaptive immune response (cell-mediated and humoral immunity by T cells and B cells). The coagulation system has traditionally been viewed as an entirely separate system that has arisen to prevent or limit loss of blood volume and blood components following mechanical injury to the circulatory system. It is becoming increasingly clear that coagulation and innate immunity have coevolved from a common ancestral substrate early in eukaryotic development, and that these systems continue to function as a highly integrated unit for survival defense following tissue injury. The mechanisms by which these highly complex and coregulated defense strategies are linked together are the focus of the present review.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12617738 PMCID: PMC154114 DOI: 10.1186/cc1854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Pattern recognition receptors of the innate immune response and their major known natural ligands
| Receptor or related structure | Cell type or soluble factor | Examples of known natural microbial ligands |
| CD14 | Myeloid cells and soluble forms | PAMPs from bacterial, fungal, and mycobacterial antigens |
| Mannose binding lectin | Soluble factor | Binds to mannosides found on bacteria and fungi; activates complement and opsonin for neutrophils |
| C-reactive protein | Soluble protein | Opsonin for Gram-positive bacteria |
| LPS-binding protein | Soluble protein | Binds to lipopolysaccharide in Gram-negative bacteria and lipoteichoic acid Gram-positive bacteria |
| C'3, alternative complement | Soluble proteins | Polysaccharide capsules of bacteria, fungi |
| MD1 | B cells | Coreceptor for LPS on cell surface of B cells |
| MD2 | Myeloid cells | Coreceptor for LPS on macrophages, neutrophils |
| TLR1 | Myeloid cells | Lipopeptide, lipoteichoic acid, LPS of leptospirosis |
| TLR2 | Myeloid cells | Peptidoglycan, lipopeptide, lipoarabinomannan, fungal cell wall components, LPS of leptospirosis |
| TLR3 | Myeloid cells | Double-stranded viral RNA |
| TLR4 | Myeloid cells | LPS, respiratory syncytial virus proteins |
| TLR5 | Myeloid cells | Flagellin from Gram-positive or Gram-negative bacteria |
| TLR6 | Myeloid cells | Zymosan (fungal constituents) along with TLR2 |
| TLR9 | Dendritric cells, B cells, | Unmethylated CpG motifs in prokaryotic DNA epithelial cells |
LPS, lipopolysaccharide; PAMP, pathogen associated molecular pattern; TLR, Toll-like receptor.
Figure 1The human Toll-like receptors and their known ligands. CpG, cytosine-phosphoryl-quanine; ECSIT, evolutionarily conserved signaling intermediate of Toll; IκB, inhibitory kappaB; IKK, IκB inducing kinase; IRAK, IL-1 receptor associated kinase; LBP-lipopolysaccharide-binding protein; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MyD88, myeloid differentiation factor 88; NF-κB, nuclear factor-κ for B cells; NIK, NF-κB inducing kinase; PG, peptidoglycan; TIR, Toll IL-1 receptor domain; TRAF6, Tumor necrosis factor receptor associated factor-6.
Figure 2The major coagulation factors and the pathways of coagulation activation in sepsis. TF, tissue factor; t-PA, tissue-type plasminogen activator.
Figure 3The principal coagulation regulatory pathways and their sites of action. TF, tissue factor; t-PA, tissue-type plasminogen activator.
The inflammatory effects of coagulation and loss of anticoagulants
| Coagulation parameter | Proinflammatory Effects |
| Thrombin generation | Promotes cytokine and chemokine synthesis (IL-6, IL-8) via PARs, P-selectin, E-selectin and PAF expression, which facilitates neutrophil–endothelial cell interactions, bradykinin and histamine release |
| Factor Xa and TF–factor VIIa complex generation | Promotes cytokine and chemokine synthesis (IL-6, IL-8) via PAR-1 and PAR-2 |
| Reduced antithrombin | Results in the loss of prostacyclin synthesis by endothelial cells, increased cytokine synthesis, increased leukocyte adherence and chemotaxis |
| Reduced protein C/protein S activity | Results in increased E-selectin expression, increased cytokine generation and neutrophil adherence; promotes apoptosis of endothelial cells |
| Reduced TFPI activity | Results in loss of regulation of cytokine synthesis within microcirculation |
| Platelet activation | Platelet derived P-selectin promotes neutrophil adherence, neutrophil–endothelial cell interactions; platelet CD40 ligand promotes endothelial cell chemokine and adhesion molecule expression; activated platelets secrete chemokines and IL-1β |
| Intravascular fibrin deposition | Neutrophil and monocyte adherence |
| Reduced thrombomodulin expression on endothelial cells | Loss of TM lectin domain activity that inhibits neutrophil–endothelial cell adherence may promote neutrophil binding |
IL, interleukin; PAF, platelet-activating factor; PAR, protease activated receptor; TF, tissue factor; TFPI, tissue factor pathway inhibitor; TM, thrombomodulin.
Procoagulant effects of inflammatory mediators
| Inflammatory Mediator | Procoagulant effects |
| Proinflammatory cytokines | Increased TF expression on endothelium, monocytes; decreased TM and endothelial protein C receptor; increased PAI-1; release of TFPI from endothelium with loss of activity |
| Complement components | Decreased C1-esterase inhibitor leads to loss of contact factor regulation; damaged cell membranes promote procoagulant activity on cell surfaces of endothelial cells |
| Acute phase proteins | Increase in clotting factor synthesis; decrease in synthesis of antithrombin; α1-antitrypsin decreases APC and cleaves TFPI; CRP promotes TF expression; C4b-binding protein binds to protein S and limits protein C activity |
| Neutrophils | Elastase destroys antithrombin, C1-inhibitor, thrombomodulin, and cleaves TFPI; intravascular neutrophil–platelet aggregates occlude capillary beds |
| Activated monocytes | Upregulation of TF expression; IL-6 and TNF synthesis promote acute phase proteins with procoagulant activities; release of microvesicles with TF in circulation |
| Activated endothelium | P-selectin promotes platelet aggregation, procoagulant surface upregulation of TF; PAF expression stimulates platelets; shedding of glycosaminoglycans limits antithrombin binding; loss of TM and EPCR expression limits APC synthesis |
APC, activated protein C; CRP, C reactive protein; EPCR, endothelial protein C receptor; PAF, platelet activating factor; PAI, plasminogen activator inhibitor; TF, tissue factor; TFPI, tissue factor pathway inhibitor; TM, thrombomodulin; TNF, tumor necrosis factor.