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  • Activation of endothelial TLR2 by bacterial lipoprotein upregulates proteins specific for the neutrophil response.

Activation of endothelial TLR2 by bacterial lipoprotein upregulates proteins specific for the neutrophil response.

Innate immunity (2011-12-22)
Kevin Wilhelmsen, Kailin R Mesa, Arun Prakash, Fengyun Xu, Judith Hellman
ABSTRACT

The vascular endothelium is integrally involved in the host response to infection and in organ failure during acute inflammatory disorders such as sepsis. Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial lipoproteins circulate in sepsis and can directly activate the endothelium by binding to endothelial cell (EC) TLR2. In this report, we perform the most comprehensive analysis to date of the immune-related genes regulated after activation of endothelial TLR2 by bacterial di- and triacylated lipopeptides. We found that TLR2 activation specifically induces the expression of the genes IL-6, IL-8, CSF2, CSF3, ICAM1 and SELE by human umbilical vein ECs and human lung microvascular ECs. These proteins participate in neutrophil recruitment, adherence and activation at sites of inflammation. Significantly, our studies demonstrate that TLR2-mediated EC responses are specifically geared towards recruitment, activation, and survival of neutrophils and not mononuclear leukocytes, that ECs do not require priming by other inflammatory stimuli to respond to bacterial lipopeptides and, unlike mononuclear leukocytes, TLR2 agonists do not induce ECs to secrete TNF-α. This study suggests that endothelial TLR2 may be an important regulator of neutrophil trafficking to sites of infection in general, and that direct activation of lung endothelial TLR2 may contribute to acute lung injury during sepsis.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Donkey Anti-Goat IgG Antibody, FITC conjugate, Species Adsorbed, Chemicon®, from donkey
Sigma-Aldrich
Goat Anti-Mouse IgG Antibody, F(ab′)2, FITC conjugate, 1 mg/mL, Chemicon®