ABSTRACT
RATIONALE: Chorioamnionitis is paradoxically associated with a decreased incidence of respiratory distress syndrome in preterm infants. In preterm lambs, intraamniotic endotoxin and interleukin 1 (IL-1) induce lung inflammation followed by lung maturation. OBJECTIVE: To test if inflammatory cells are required to mediate induced lung maturation. METHODS: Lung inflammation was induced by intraamniotic injection of endotoxin or IL-1. Inflammatory cell recruitment to the lung was inhibited by an anti-CD18 blocking antibody given intramuscularly to the fetus. Preterm lambs were delivered at 124-d gestation (term = 150 d) 2 or 7 d after exposure to endotoxin/IL-1 or endotoxin/IL-1 + anti-CD18 antibody. MEASUREMENTS: Lung inflammation was measured by bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cell count, inflammatory scoring of lung parenchyma, and expression of proinflammatory cytokines and inducible nitric oxide synthase. Lung maturation was quantitated by surfactant protein mRNA expression, saturated phosphatidylcholine pool size, and pressure-volume curves. MAIN RESULTS: Inhibition of CD18 significantly reduced endotoxin-induced but not IL-1-induced fetal lung inflammatory cell recruitment and activation as well as expression of proinflammatory cytokines. Compared with control lungs, both endotoxin and IL-1 induced lung maturation. Anti-CD18 antibody administration inhibited only endotoxin-induced but not IL-1-induced increases in surfactant protein mRNA and surfactant saturated phosphatidylcholine. Exposure to anti-CD18 antibody moderated endotoxin-induced increases in lung volumes but had no effect on IL-1-induced increases in lung volumes. CONCLUSIONS: (1) Endotoxin- but not IL-1-induced inflammatory cell recruitment in the preterm fetal lamb lung is CD18 dependent; (2) recruited inflammatory cells mediate some aspects of fetal lung maturation.
Subject(s)
Lung/embryology , Animals , Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid , CD18 Antigens/immunology , Endotoxins , Female , Fetal Organ Maturity , Flow Cytometry , Interleukin-1/analysis , Leukocyte Count , Neutrophil Activation , Neutrophil Infiltration/drug effects , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II/analysis , Pregnancy , Premature Birth , Pulmonary Surfactants/analysis , RNA, Messenger/analysis , SheepABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of an anti-CD14 monoclonal antibody on the clearance of a bacteremic Escherichia coli challenge in the presence or absence of antimicrobial agents. DESIGN: Prospective randomized animal study. SETTING: University-affiliated research laboratory. SUBJECTS: New Zealand White rabbits weighing 1.5-2.5 kg. INTERVENTIONS: Animals were pretreated with either an anti-lapine CD14 monoclonal antibody (immunoglobulin G2a, 5 mg/kg intravenously) or an isotype control monoclonal antibody. The animals then were challenged with 1 x 10(6) E. coli 018:K1 in the presence or absence of ceftazidime (50 mg/kg intravenously). There were four groups of six animals randomized to receive either anti-CD14 monoclonal antibody without ceftazidime, isotype control monoclonal antibody without ceftazidime, anti-CD14 monoclonal antibody with ceftazidime, or isotype control antibody with ceftazidime. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Serial measurement of quantitative bacteremia and endotoxemia was performed over 24 hrs after the administration of the bacterial challenge. Animals also underwent necropsy with quantitative bacterial cultures from multiple organ tissue samples. The anti-lapine CD14 monoclonal antibody significantly impaired the bloodstream clearance of E. coli (p <.01) and increased quantitative counts of E. coli in tissue culture samples when compared with isotype control antibody in the absence of simultaneous administration of ceftazidime. No differences in quantitative bacteremia, endotoxemia, or organ tissue counts were found after anti-CD14 antibody and control antibody-treated animals in the presence of ceftazidime treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Anti-CD14 monoclonal antibody has the capacity to interfere with the innate immune response and systemic microbial clearance in experimental animals with E. coli bacteremia. The concomitant administration of effective antimicrobial therapy eliminated differences in the rate of microbial clearance between the control antibody and the CD14 monoclonal antibody. These results indicate that care should be taken in clinical trials with anti-CD14 monoclonal antibodies to ensure that adequate antimicrobial therapy is administered in the presence of systemic bacterial infection.