Abstract

The effects of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on the central nervous system, one of the first organs to be affected by sepsis, are still incompletely understood. Rat microglia (BMphi) constitute the main leukocyte-dependent source of reactive oxygen species in the central nervous system. The in vitro effect of LPS on agonist-stimulated superoxide (O2-) generation from BMphi appears controversial. Our purpose was to determine the time- and concentration-dependent effect of Escherichia coil LPS on phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2- generation from BMphi. Our results demonstrate that BMphi O2- generation in vitro peaked 17 h after stimulation of with .3 ng/mL LPS. Furthermore, stimulation of BMphi with LPS for 17 h resulted in the following concentration-dependent responses: .1-1 ng/mL LPS induced no prior mediator generation but potently enhanced subsequent phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2- generation; 3-10 ng/mL LPS caused nitric oxide, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), thromboxane B2 and matrix metalloproteinase-9 release although partially inhibiting ensuing phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2- generation; 30-100 ng/mL LPS, maximized nitric oxide, TNF-alpha, thromboxane B2, matrix metalloproteinase-9 generation with concomitant lactic dehydrogenase release although strongly deactivating successive phorbol-12 myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2 production. Our in vitro studies suggest that enhanced release of these four mediators (nitric oxide, TNF-alpha, thromboxane B2, and matrix metalloproteinase-9) during stimulation of BMphi with LPS might play a critical role in the subsequent ability of BMphi to generate O2- in vivo. Potential clinical implications of our findings are suggested by the fact that LPS levels similar to the ones used in this study have been observed in cerebrospinal fluid both in Gram-negative meningitis and sepsis.

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