Abstract

We investigated the mechanism by which leukocytes adhere to the pulmonary and liver microvascular endothelium in a septic murine model. After C57BL/6 mice were intraperitoneally (ip) injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a striking peripheral leukocytopenia occurred as neutrophils accumulated rapidly in the lung and liver. When the anti-Mac-1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) was administered intravenously (iv) 2 hr before the ip administrated LPS, leukocytopenia and neutrophil accumulation in the lung and liver were inhibited significantly at 3 hr after the LPS injection. An immunofluorescence study revealed that Mac-1 expression on leukocytes from LPS-injected mice were greatly increased when compared to that of controls. Additionally, an in vitro assay demonstrated that LPS-activated serum increased neutrophil Mac-1 expression and neutrophil adhesion to the endothelial monolayer and that these phenomena are inhibited by pretreatment of neutrophils with anti-Mac-1 mAb. These results indicate that a marked increase in Mac-1 antigen expression by leukocytes plays a crucial role in striking neutrophil attachment to the vascular endothelium and is likely to be the cause of neutrophil accumulation in the lung and liver during endotoxemia.

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