Abstract

1. Sepsis induced by S. aureus was used to investigate whether neutrophil migration failure to infectious focus correlates with lethality in Gram-positive bacteria-induced sepsis in mice. 2. By contrast with the sub-lethal (SL-group), the lethal (L-group) intraperitoneal inoculum of S. aureus caused failure of neutrophil migration (92% reduction), high CFU in the exudate, bacteremia and impairment of in vitro neutrophil chemotactic activity. 3. Pre-treatments of L-group with adequate doses of aminoguanidine prevented the neutrophil migration failure and improved the survival of the animals (pre-treated: 43%; untreated: 0% survival). Thus, the impairment of neutrophil migration in the L-group appears to be mediated by nitric oxide (NO). 4. The injection of S. aureus SL-inoculum in iNOS deficient (-/-) or aminoguanidine-treated wild-type mice (pre- and post-treatment), which did not present neutrophil migration failure, paradoxically caused severe peritonitis and high mortality. This fact is explainable by the lack of NO dependent microbicidal activity in migrated neutrophils. 5. In conclusion, although the NO microbicidal mechanism is active in neutrophils, the failure of their migration to the infectious focus may be responsible for the severity and outcome of sepsis.

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