Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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L-selectin shedding in sepsis limits leukocyte mediated microvascular injury at remote sites.

Surgery 2009 April
BACKGROUND: Increased soluble L-selectin levels have been shown to attenuate local inflammation-mediated microvascular leakage, and failure to generate high levels has been associated with increased risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome in septic patients. We hypothesized that failure to shed L-selectin in systemic inflammation would result in increased local inflammation-induced leukocyte adherence and microvascular leakage.

METHODS: Using intraperitoneal lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or control bicarbonate buffered saline (BBS) and intrascrotal TNFalpha or BBS, mice were randomized to systemic inflammation (LPSip + BBSis), local inflammation (BBSip + TNFis), both (LPSip + TNFis), or control (BBSip+BBSis). Furthermore, mice received intraperitoneal L-selectin Sheddase inhibitor (Ro31-9790) or control vector. With intravital microscopy on cremaster muscle, we measured leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions and microvascular leakage (permeability index). Surface L-selectin was measured by flow cytometry (MCF).

RESULTS: Without Ro31-9790, systemic inflammation attenuated increases induced by local inflammation in leukocyte adherence and vascular leakage. Ro31-9790 significantly increased adherence and leakage in systemic and systemic + local inflammation. L-selectin was shed progressively by increasing degrees of inflammation. Ro31-9790 limited this shedding of L-selectin.

CONCLUSION: In systemic inflammation, L-selectin shedding is required to limit local inflammation-mediated leukocyte adherence and microvascular leakage. Failure to shed L-selectin may increase leukocyte-mediated end-organ injury in septic patients.

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