恶化
医学
慢性阻塞性肺病
免疫学
流感嗜血杆菌
先天免疫系统
卡他莫拉菌
支气管肺泡灌洗
TLR2型
肺炎链球菌
免疫系统
肺
内科学
微生物学
生物
抗生素
作者
Charles S. Berenson,Ragina L. Kruzel,Ellana Eberhardt,Ree Y. Dolnick,Hans Minderman,Paul K. Wallace,Sanjay Sethi
出处
期刊:Thorax
[BMJ]
日期:2014-03-31
卷期号:69 (9): 811-818
被引量:88
标识
DOI:10.1136/thoraxjnl-2013-203669
摘要
Background
Alveolar macrophages (AM) in COPD have fundamentally impaired responsiveness to Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) and TLR4 ligands of non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI). However, the contribution of innate immune dysfunction to exacerbations of COPD is unexplored. We hypothesised that impaired innate AM responses in COPD extend beyond NTHI to other pathogens and are linked with COPD exacerbations and severity. Methods
AMs, obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage from 88 volunteers with stable-to-moderate COPD, were incubated with respiratory pathogens (NTHI, Moraxella catarrhalis (MC), Streptococcus pneumoniae (SP) and TLR ligands lipopolysaccharide, Pam3Cys) and elicited IL-8 and TNF-α were measured by microsphere flow cytometry. NF-κB nuclear translocation was measured by colorimetric assay. AM TLR2 and TLR4 expression was determined by immunolabeling and quantitation of mean fluorescent indices. Participants were monitored prospectively for occurrence of COPD exacerbations for 1 year following bronchoscopy. Non--parametric analyses were used to compare exacerbation-prone and non-exacerbation-prone individuals. Results
29 subjects had at least one exacerbation in the follow-up period (exacerbation-prone) and 59 remained exacerbation-free (non-exacerbation-prone). AMs of exacerbation-prone COPD donors were more refractory to cytokine induction by NTHI (p=0.02), MC (p=0.045) and SP (p=0.046), and to TLR2 (p=0.07) and TLR4 (p=0.028) ligands, and had diminished NF-κB nuclear activation, compared with non-exacerbation-prone counterparts. AMs of exacerbation-prone subjects were more refractory to TLR2 upregulation by MC and SP (p=0.04 each). Conclusions
Our results support a paradigm of impaired innate responses of COPD AMs to respiratory pathogens, mediated by impaired TLR responses, underlying a propensity for exacerbations in COPD.
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