T Cells Modulate Neutrophil-Dependent Acute Renal Failure during Endotoxemia
Open Access
- 1 March 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
- Vol. 16 (3) , 720-728
- https://doi.org/10.1681/asn.2004050381
Abstract
Sepsis still represents a leading cause of acute renal failure (ARF). Both lymphocytes and neutrophils (PMN) have been proposed as crucial mediators during sepsis. For further elucidation of the mechanisms of interactions between them, a murine model of LPS-induced ARF was used. In wild-type mice (WT), LPS administration led to a strong influx of PMN into the kidney (2.8-fold greater renal myeloperoxidase activity after 24 h) and to severe ARF (3.3-fold higher plasma creatinine concentrations after 24 h). By contrast, mice that were gene deficient for CD28 (CD28−/−), a co-stimulatory molecule for T cell activation, exhibited only minor renal dysfunction (50% protection compared with WT) and almost no PMN recruitment. When PMN− depleted, both WT and CD28−/− developed only mild ARF, similar to untreated CD28−/−. Flow cytometry demonstrated that CD28 was vastly expressed on CD3+ cells but not on PMN. Injecting wild-type CD3+ cells into CD28−/− before LPS injection abolished the protection seen before. At baseline, both WT and CD28−/− displayed similar plasma concentrations of keratinocyte-derived chemokine (KC), a growth-related oncogene 1 gene product and PMN-specific chemokine. As opposed to WT, CD28−/− showed a greatly attenuated increase in plasma KC 4 h after LPS (2.5- versus 138.5-fold over controls, respectively). Moreover, CD28−/− showed less intense upregulation of renal growth-related oncogene 1 mRNA expression. Immunohistochemistry revealed considerable PMN but no T cell infiltrates in the kidney after LPS injection. In a PMN-dependent model of endotoxemic ARF, T cells, via the CD28 pathway, modulate kidney function and renal PMN recruitment. The effect on PMN is a remote one and presumably due to altered expression of PMN-specific chemokines.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- How we detect microbes and respond to them: the Toll-like receptors and their transducersJournal of Leukocyte Biology, 2003
- CD28, Costimulator or Agonist Receptor?The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2003
- Molecular modifiers of T cell antigen receptor triggering threshold: the mechanism of CD28 costimulatory receptorImmunological Reviews, 2003
- The Pathophysiology and Treatment of SepsisNew England Journal of Medicine, 2003
- It's all Rel-ative: NF-κB and CD28 costimulation of T-cell activationTrends in Immunology, 2002
- The B7 Family of Ligands and Its Receptors: New Pathways for Costimulation and Inhibition of Immune ResponsesAnnual Review of Immunology, 2002
- Regulation of Macrophage Inflammatory Protein-1α Expression and Function by Endogenous Interleukin-10 in a Model of Acute InflammationBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1999
- Inhibition of T cell costimulation abrogates airway hyperresponsiveness in a murine model.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1996
- Functional diversity of helper T lymphocytesNature, 1996
- Differential T Cell Costimulatory Requirements in CD28-Deficient MiceScience, 1993