Macrophage inflammatory protein-2 is required for neutrophil passage across the epithelial barrier of the infected urinary tract

L Hang, M Haraoka, WW Agace, H Leffler… - The Journal of …, 1999 - journals.aai.org
L Hang, M Haraoka, WW Agace, H Leffler, M Burdick, R Strieter, C Svanborg
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
IL-8 is a major human neutrophil chemoattractant at mucosal infection sites. This study
examined the CXC chemokine response to mucosal infection, and, specifically, the role of
macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-2, one of the mouse IL-8 equivalents, for neutrophil-
epithelial interactions. Following intravesical Escherichia coli infection, several CXC
chemokines were secreted into the urine, but only MIP-2 concentrations correlated to
neutrophil numbers. Tissue quantitation demonstrated that kidney MIP-2 production was …
Abstract
IL-8 is a major human neutrophil chemoattractant at mucosal infection sites. This study examined the CXC chemokine response to mucosal infection, and, specifically, the role of macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-2, one of the mouse IL-8 equivalents, for neutrophil-epithelial interactions. Following intravesical Escherichia coli infection, several CXC chemokines were secreted into the urine, but only MIP-2 concentrations correlated to neutrophil numbers. Tissue quantitation demonstrated that kidney MIP-2 production was triggered by infection, and immunohistochemistry identified the kidney epithelium as a main source of MIP-2. Treatment with anti-MIP-2 Ab reduced the urine neutrophil numbers, but the mice had normal tissue neutrophil levels. By immunohistochemistry, the neutrophils were found in aggregates under the pelvic epithelium, but in control mice the neutrophils crossed the urothelium into the urine. The results demonstrate that different chemokines direct neutrophil migration from the bloodstream to the lamina propria and across the epithelium and that MIP-2 serves the latter function. These findings suggest that neutrophils cross epithelial cell barriers in a highly regulated manner in response to chemokines elaborated at this site. This is yet another mechanism that defines the mucosal compartment and differentiates the local from the systemic host response.
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