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Intratracheal administration of endotoxin and cytokines: VIII. LPS induces E-selectin expression; anti-E-selectin and soluble E-selectin inhibit acute inflammation
Collins, Tucker; Yi, Eunhee S.; Guo, Kaizhi; Williams, James H.; Steininger, Christina N.; Welply, Joseph K.; Keene, Jeffery L.; Schmuke, Jon J.; Ulich, Thomas R.; Howard, Susan C.; Remick, Daniel G.; Yin, Songmei
1994-08
Citation:Ulich, Thomas R.; Howard, Susan C.; Remick, Daniel G.; Yi, Eunhee S.; Collins, Tucker; Guo, Kaizhi; Yin, Songmei; Keene, Jeffery L.; Schmuke, Jon J.; Steininger, Christina N.; Welply, Joseph K.; Williams, James H.; (1994). "Intratracheal administration of endotoxin and cytokines: VIII. LPS induces E-selectin expression; anti-E-selectin and soluble E-selectin inhibit acute inflammation." Inflammation 18 (4): 389-398. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/44513>
Abstract: E-selectin is an inducible endothelial adhesion molecule that binds neutrophils. E-selectin mRNA is not constitutively detectable in the lungs of rats. Intratracheal injection of LPS induces pulmonary E-selectin mRNA expression at 2–4 h. Intratracheal injection of LPS followed at 2 and 4 h by intravenous injection of mouse F(ab′) 2 or F(ab′)) anti-E-selectin monoclonal antibody inhibits the emigration of neutrophils into the bronchoalveolar space at 6 h by 50–70%. TNF and IL-6 bioactivity are not decreased in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid after treatment with anti-E-selectin antibody as compared to controls, suggesting that the anti-E-selectin does not affect the magnitude of the LPS-initiated cytokine cascade. Intratracheal injection of LPS followed at 2 and 4 h by intravenous injection of soluble E-selectin inhibits neutrophilic emigration at 6 h by 64%, suggesting that endogenous soluble E-selectin shed from activated endothelium may play a role in the endogenous down-regulation of acute inflammation. E-selectin-mediated adhesion of neutrophils to endothelium appears crucial to the full development of the acute inflammation response.