Abstract

The fate of polymorphonuclear neutrophilic granulocytes (PMN) after their mobilization from the bone marrow of healthy individuals is not clearly understood. It has been suggested that there is a continuous utilization of these cells in widespread, subclinical inflammatory foci, where they are ultimately degraded. The goal of the present experiments was to determine whether an alternative ecotaxis ("homing") exists, namely sequestration and degradation of PMN by mononuclear phagocytes exposed to the bloodstream in the liver, spleen and bone marrow. Blood PMN were collected from donor rats, labelled with 51 Cr, and injected i.v. into 2 syngeneic rats, one of them having an induced sterile peritonitis. After various time intervals up to 18 h, the rats were killed and exsanguinated. As expected, we found cell-bound radioactivity in liver, spleen, and bone marrow. The bone marrow uptake of PMN appeared to be much lower in the inflammation rats than in the normal controls. These findings were confirmed in PMN transfer experiments using PVG rats congenic for the RT7 alloantigenic system. Here, transfused blood leukocytes were traced with fluorescent, monoclonal HIS41 antibodies and flow cytometry. A possible corticosteroid effect on the bone marrow sequestration could not be substantiated. Uptake and degradation of PMN takes place in organs containing phagocytes exposed to the bloodstream. Sequestration of PMN in the bone marrow is apparently down-regulated in inflammatory states, perhaps increasing the PMN availability to inflamed tissue.

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