Abstract

The recent characterization of lipopolysaccharide binding protein (LBP) and bactericidal/permeability increasing factor (BPI) have provided the opportunity to examine the natural factors that regulate cytokine production in response to endotoxin in patients on hemodialysis (HD). Whole blood was collected in EDTA from 28 undialyzed patients with chronic renal failure (undialyzed CRF), 36 patients on chronic HD (HD) and 15 healthy controls, and plasma levels of LBP and BPI were measured by a sandwich ELISA. Plasma LBP levels in undialyzed patients with CRF (P = 0.04) and patients on HD (P = 0.01) were significantly higher than those in healthy controls, but not significantly different from each other. Plasma BPI levels in undialyzed patients with CRF and patients on HD were not significantly different from those in healthy controls. There was no correlation between serum creatinine and plasma levels of either LBP or BPI. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were harvested from healthy volunteers by FLcoll-Hypaque separation, and 0.125 mL of 10 x 10(6)/mL suspensions were incubated with 0.125 mL of test plasma (containing different LBP/BPI ratios) and 0.25 mL of RPMI, containing 1 ng/mL of endotoxin, for 24 h at 37 degrees C. Samples were subjected to three freeze-thaw cycles, and total interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) or interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) production was measured by a specific non-crossreactive RIA. The results of this study showed: (1) IL-1Ra production by endotoxin-stimulated PBMC incubated with pooled plasma from HD patients with LBP/BPI ratios of 11 x 10(2), 167 x 10(2), 379 x 10(2), and 778 x 10(2), respectively was 1466 +/- 195 pg, 3105 +/- 462 pg, 8179 +/- 1020 pg, and 4770 +/- 1185 pg (P < 0.001); (2) Paired plasma collected before dialysis (predialysis) and at 15 min after the start of dialysis (15 minute) with cellulose membranes showed a negligible change in plasma LBP levels (-3 +/- 5%), but a 6681 +/- 1788% increase in plasma BPI levels. Consequently, compared with predialysis plasma, there was a 35 +/- 6% decrease in endotoxin-stimulated IL-1 alpha production by PBMC incubated with plasma drawn at 15 min (P = 0.001); (3) Compared with the PBMC incubated with predialysis plasma from HD patients, there was a 39 +/- 5%, 53 +/- 5%, and 60 +/- 5% decrease in endotoxin-stimulated IL-1 alpha production in the presence of 1 ng/ mL, 10 ng/mL, or 1 microgram/mL of recombinant BPI, respectively (P < 0.003). These results suggest that the plasma LBP:BPI ratio could influence cytokine production in response to bacterial endotoxin; the high LBP:BPI ratios observed in patients with chronic renal failure probably imparts an increased susceptibility to endotoxin-stimulated cytokine production; and natural or pharmacological increases in plasma BPI levels and the consequent decrease in LBP:BPI ratios could attenuate this susceptibility to endotoxin-stimulated cytokine production.

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