In vivo regulation of rat neutrophil apoptosis occurring spontaneously or induced with TNF-alpha or cycloheximide.
Open Access
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 154 (5) , 2403-2412
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.154.5.2403
Abstract
We previously demonstrated that human TNF-alpha induces rapid apoptosis of human neutrophils. To understand better the in vivo significance of neutrophil apoptosis, we examined spontaneous, recombinant human and mouse TNF-alpha- or cycloheximide-induced apoptosis of normal peripheral blood neutrophils (PBN), PBN from rats injected i.p. with proteose peptone or a streptococcus preparation, OK-432 (inflammatory PBN), peritoneally exudated neutrophils (PEN) obtained after a proteose peptone injection, and normal bone marrow neutrophils. The following observations were made. 1) Normal PBN responded to TNF-alpha, but PEN, normal bone marrow neutrophils, and inflammatory PBN at 12 h after stimulation did not. 2) The sensitivity to TNF-alpha of the inflammatory PBN started to decrease at 3 h, was lowest at 12 h, and was almost restored at 52 h after stimulation. 3) Spontaneous apoptosis of normal and inflammatory PBN reached 25% at 12 h after in vitro incubation, but that of PEN and normal bone marrow neutrophils was very low over this period. 4) The sensitivity to cycloheximide (6 h incubation) was high for normal PBN and bone marrow neutrophils, but low for PEN and inflammatory PBN after 12 h. 5) 125I-rhTNF-alpha binding of bone marrow neutrophils was significantly lower than that of normal and inflammatory PBN and PEN. 6) TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis of normal or inflammatory PBN and bone marrow neutrophils was enhanced by treatment with low doses of cycloheximide that alone were barely able to induce neutrophil apoptosis; however, apoptosis of PEN was not. The mechanisms and in vivo significance of these phenomena are discussed.Keywords
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