4 resultados para Blood cells.

em DI-fusion - The institutional repository of Université Libre de Bruxelles


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Changes in red blood cell (RBC) function can contribute to alterations in microcirculatory blood flow and cellular dysoxia in sepsis. Decreases in RBC and neutrophil deformability impair the passage of these cells through the microcirculation. While the role of leukocytes has been the focus of many studies in sepsis, the role of erythrocyte rheological alterations in this syndrome has only recently been investigated. RBC rheology can be influenced by many factors, including alterations in intracellular calcium and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) concentrations, the effects of nitric oxide, a decrease in some RBC membrane components such as sialic acid, and an increase in others such as 2,3 diphosphoglycerate. Other factors include interactions with white blood cells and their products (reactive oxygen species), or the effects of temperature variations. Understanding the mechanisms of altered RBC rheology in sepsis, and the effects on blood flow and oxygen transport, may lead to improved patient management and reductions in morbidity and mortality.

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Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a prototypical autoimmune disease characterized by polyclonal B cell activation and by the production of anti-double-stranded (ds) DNA antibodies. Given the inhibitory effects of IL-12 on humoral immune responses, we investigated whether IL-12 displayed such an activity on in vitro immunoglobulin production by SLE PBMC. Spontaneous IgG, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgM antibody production was dramatically reduced by addition of IL-12. These results were confirmed by Elispot assays detecting IgG- and anti-dsDNA-secreting cells. While IL-6 and TNF titres measured in PBMC supernatants were not modified by addition of IL-12, interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) titres were up-regulated and IL-10 production down-regulated. Since addition of IFN-gamma did not down-regulate immunoglobulin production and since the inhibitory activity of IL-12 on immunoglobulin synthesis was not suppressed by anti-IFN-gamma antibody, we concluded that the effect of IL-12 on immunoglobulin production was not mediated through IFN-gamma. Our data also argue against the possibility that down-regulation of endogenous IL-10 production was responsible for the effect of IL-12. Thus, inhibition of IL-10 production by IFN-gamma was not accompanied by inhibition of immunoglobulin production, and conversely, restoration of IL-10 production by anti-IFN-gamma antibody did not suppress the inhibitory activity exerted by IL-12 on immunoglobulin production. Taken together, our data indicate that reduction of excessive immunoglobulin and anti-dsDNA antibody production by lupus PBMC can be achieved in vitro by IL-12, independently of IFN-gamma and IL-10 modulation.

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Real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has recently been described as a new tool to measure and accurately quantify mRNA levels. In this study, we have applied this technique to evaluate cytokine mRNA synthesis induced by antigenic stimulation with purified protein derivative (PPD) or heparin-binding haemagglutinin (HBHA) in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected individuals. Whereas PPD and HBHA optimally induced IL-2 mRNA after respectively 8 and 16 to 24 h of in vitro stimulation, longer in vitro stimulation times were necessary for optimal induction of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) mRNA, respectively 16 to 24 h for PPD and 24 to 96 h for HBHA. IL-13 mRNA was optimally induced by in vitro stimulation after 16-48 h for PPD and after 48 to 96 h for HBHA. Comparison of antigen-induced Th1 and Th2 cytokines appears, therefore, valuable only if both cytokine types are analysed at their optimal time point of production, which, for a given cytokine, may differ for each antigen tested. Results obtained by real-time PCR for IFN-gamma and IL-13 mRNA correlated well with those obtained by measuring the cytokine concentrations in cell culture supernatants, provided they were high enough to be detected. We conclude that real-time PCR can be successfully applied to the quantification of antigen-induced cytokine mRNA and to the evaluation of the Th1/Th2 balance, only if the kinetics of cytokine mRNA appearance are taken into account and evaluated for each cytokine measured and each antigen analysed.

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CD4+CD25highFOXP3+ regulatory T (Treg) cells have recently been found at elevated levels in the peripheral blood of tuberculosis patients, compared to Mycobacterium tuberculosis latently infected (LTBI) healthy individuals and non-infected controls. Here, we show that CD4+CD25highFOXP3+ T lymphocytes can be expanded in vitro from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of LTBI individuals, but not of uninfected controls by incubating them with BCG in the presence of TGF-beta. These expanded cells from the PBMC of LTBI subjects expressed CTLA-4, GITR and OX-40, but were CD127low/- and have therefore the phenotype of Treg cells. In addition, they inhibited in a dose-dependant manner the proliferation of freshly isolated mononuclear cells in response to polyclonal stimulation, indicating that they are functional Treg lymphocytes. In contrast, incubation of the PBMC with BCG alone preferentially induced activated CD4+ T cells, expressing CD25 and/or CD69 and secreting IFN-gamma. These results show that CD4+CD25highFOXP3+ Treg cells can be expanded or induced in the peripheral blood of LTBI individuals in conditions known to predispose to progression towards active tuberculosis and may therefore play an important role in the pathogenesis of the disease.