Major injury leads to predominance of the T helper-2 lymphocyte phenotype and diminished interleukin-12 production associated with decreased resistance to infection
Patients with serious traumatic injury and major burns and an animal model of burn injury were studied to determine the effect of injury on the production of cytokines typical of the T helper-2 lymphocyte phenotype as opposed to the T helper-1 phenotype and on the production of interleukin-12. Pertu...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of surgery 1995-10, Vol.222 (4), p.482-492 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Patients with serious traumatic injury and major burns and an animal model of burn injury were studied to determine the effect of injury on the production of cytokines typical of the T helper-2 lymphocyte phenotype as opposed to the T helper-1 phenotype and on the production of interleukin-12.
Perturbations of natural and adoptive immunity are related to the increased susceptibility to infection manifested by seriously injured and burn patients. Earlier work has shown that impaired adoptive immunity after injury is characterized by diminished production of interleukin-2 (IL-2), a product of Th lymphocytes. Exposure of naive Th cells to certain antigens and cytokines causes conversion to either the Th-1 or the Th-2 phenotype. Th-1 cells produce IL-2 and interferon-gamma (IFN-tau) and initiate cellular immunity. Th-2 cells secrete interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interleukin-10 (IL-10) and stimulate production of certain antibodies. Conversion to the Th-1 phenotype is facilitated by IL-12, and conversion to the Th-2 phenotype is promoted by IL-4. The authors believed that serious injury might cause conversion of Th cells to the Th-2 as opposed to the Th-1 phenotype rather than generalized Th suppression.
The authors studied circulating peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from 16 major burn and 8 trauma patients on 32 occasions early after injury and from 13 age- and sex-matched healthy individuals for cytokine production after phytohemagglutinin stimulation. Also studied was a mouse model of 20% burn injury known to mimic the immune abnormalities seen in humans with burns. Splenocytes from burn mice, 10 to 12 per group, were studied after activation by concanavalin A or by the bacterial antigen Staphylococcus aureus Cowan strain I for cytokine production and cytokine messenger RNA expression as determined by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Burn mice were compared with sham-burn controls and attention was focused on day 10 after burn injury, a time when IL-2 production and resistance to infection are highly suppressed. Finally, burn and sham-burn animals, 20 per group, were treated in vivo with IL-12 (25 ng daily for 5 days) and observed for mortality after septic challenge (cecal ligation and puncture [CLP]) performed on day 10 after injury.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from burn and trauma patients produced less IFN-tau, the index cytokine of Th-1 cells, than PBMCs from healthy individuals 1 to 14 days after burn injury (SE = 77.6 +/- 1 |
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ISSN: | 0003-4932 1528-1140 |
DOI: | 10.1097/00000658-199522240-00006 |