DEFECTIVE PRODUCTION OF INTERLEUKIN-6 BY MONOCYTES - A POSSIBLE MECHANISM UNDERLYING SEVERAL HOST DEFENSE DEFICIENCIES OF NEONATES

被引:80
作者
SCHIBLER, KR
LIECHTY, KW
WHITE, WL
ROTHSTEIN, G
CHRISTENSEN, RD
机构
[1] UNIV UTAH,SCH MED,DEPT PEDIAT,DIV HUMAN DEV & AGING,50 N MED DR,SALT LAKE CITY,UT 84112
[2] UNIV UTAH,SCH MED,DEPT PEDIAT,DIV NEONATOL,SALT LAKE CITY,UT 84112
[3] VET ADM MED CTR,SALT LAKE CITY,UT 84148
关键词
D O I
10.1203/00006450-199201000-00003
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Several deficiencies in antibacterial defense have been described in neonates. Among those best characterized are delayed maturation of B cells into antibody producing cells, deficient T-cell maturation, and delayed cycling of hematopoietic progenitor cells after an infectious challenge. No unifying theory has been forwarded, however, to explain the concomitance of these three developmental deficiencies. IL-6, a cytokine produced primarily by monocytes and macrophages in response to stimulation by IL-1, is involved in the regulation of these three processes. Thus, we postulated that defective production of IL-6 could be a mechanism underlying these immune deficiencies of neonates. Indeed, we observed that at peak production, cells of five term neonates produced only one half as much IL-6 (14 120 +/- 2590 pg IL-6/10(6) monocytes) as those of five adults (28 940 +/- 1680 pg, p < 0.001). Peak production was lower still by monocytes of six preterm neonates (7190 +/- 1400 pg, p < 0.001 versus term). Production of IL-6 protein was inhibited by actinomycin D and the IL-6 mRNA content of monocytes from neonates, as assessed by competitive polymerase chain reaction, was less than that of adult monocytes. We speculate that defective IL-6 transcription might underlie some of the defects in immune regulation observed in neonates.
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页码:18 / 21
页数:4
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