Article
S100A8 Chemotactic Protein Is Abundantly Increased, but Only a Minor Contributor to LPS-Induced, Steroid Resistant Neutrophilic Lung Inflammation in Vivo
Lung Disease Research Group, Department of Pharmacology, The University of Melbourne.
Cooperative Research Center for Chronic Inflammatory Diseases
Arthritis and Inflammation Research Center, Department of Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital.
Lung Disease Research Group, Department of Medicine, The University of Melbourne.
Inflammatory Diseases Research Unit, School of Medical Sciences, University of New South Wales.
Infectiology, CHUL Research Center, Laval University Quebec.
School of Dentistry, The University of Melbourne.
Centre for Molecular and Cellular Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, The University of Queensland.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Fax: ++ 61 3 8 344 0241. Tel: ++ 61 3 8 344 8602. E-mail: gpa@unimelb.edu.au.
Abstract

Neutrophilic lung inflammation is an essential component of host defense against diverse eukaryotic and prokaryotic pathogens, but in chronic inflammatory lung diseases, such as chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD), severe asthma, cystic fibrosis, and bronchiolitis, it may damage the host. Glucocorticosteroids are widely used in these conditions and in their infectious exacerbations; however, the clinical efficacy of steroids is disputed. In this study, we used a proteomic approach to identify molecules contributing to neutrophilic inflammation induced by transnasal administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that were also resistant to the potent glucocorticosteroid dexamethasone (Dex). We confirmed that Dex was biologically active at both the transcript (suppression of GM-CSF and TNFα transcripts) and protein levels (induction of lipocortin) and used 2D-PAGE/MALDI-TOF to generate global expression profiles, identifying six LPS-induced proteins that were Dex resistant. Of these, S100A8, a candidate neutrophil chemotactic factor, was profiled in detail. Steroid refractory S100A8 expression was highly abundant, transcriptionally regulated, secreted into lung lavage fluid and immunohistochemically localized to tissue infiltrating neutrophils. However, in marked contrast to other vascular beds, neutralizing antibodies to S100A8 had only a weak anti-neutrophil recruitment effect and antibodies against the related S100A9 were ineffective. These data highlight the need for extensive in vivo profiling of proteomically identified candidate molecules and demonstrates that S100A8, despite its abundance, resistance to steroids and known chemotactic activity, is unlikely to be an important determinant of LPS-induced neutrophilic lung inflammation in vivo.
Keywords: neutrophils • chemotaxis • inflammation • lung
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History
- Published In Issue February 14, 2005
- Received September 24, 2004
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