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Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol (March 23, 2007). doi:10.1152/ajplung.00282.2006
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Submitted on July 26, 2006
Accepted on March 22, 2007

CD14 is an essential mediator of LPS induced airway disease

David M Brass1*, John W Hollingsworth2, Erin McElvania-Tekippe3, Stavros Garantziotis2, Imtaz Hossain3, and David A. Schwartz3

1 National Institute of Environmental Health Services, United States
2 LRB, NIEHS, 27709, North Carolina, United States; Pulmonary, Allergy & Critical Care Medicine, Duke University, United States
3 LRB, NIEHS, 27709, North Carolina, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: brassd{at}niehs.nih.gov.

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) inhalation in rodents recapitulates many classic features of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease seen in humans, including airways hyperresponsiveness, neutrophilic inflammation, cytokine production in the lung, and small airways remodeling. CD14 deficient mice (C57BL/6 CD14-/-) have an altered response to systemic LPS, yet the role of CD14 in the response to inhaled LPS has not been defined. We observed that C57BL/6 CD14-/- mice demonstrate no discernable physiologic or inflammatory response to a single LPS inhalation challenge. However, the physiologic (airways hyperresponsiveness) and inflammatory (presence of neutrophils and TNF-{alpha} in whole lung lavage fluid) responsiveness to inhaled LPS in C57BL/6 CD14-/- mice was restored by instilling soluble CD14 intratracheally. Intratracheal instillation of wild type macrophages into C57BL/6 CD14-/- mice restored neutrophilic inflammation only, and failed to restore airways hyperresponsiveness or TNF-{alpha} protein in whole lung lavage. These findings demonstrate that CD14 is critical to LPS induced airway disease and that macrophage CD14 is sufficient to initiate neutrophil recruitment into the airways, but that CD14 may need to interact with other cell types as well for the development of airways hyperresponsiveness and for cytokine production.




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