CXCR2 is critical to hyperoxia-induced lung injury

RD Sue, JA Belperio, MD Burdick… - The Journal of …, 2004 - journals.aai.org
RD Sue, JA Belperio, MD Burdick, LA Murray, YY Xue, MC Dy, JJ Kwon, MP Keane…
The Journal of Immunology, 2004journals.aai.org
Hyperoxia-induced lung injury is characterized by infiltration of activated neutrophils in
conjunction with endothelial and epithelial cell injury, followed by fibrogenesis. Specific
mechanisms recruiting neutrophils to the lung during hyperoxia-induced lung injury have not
been fully elucidated. Because CXCL1 and CXCL2/3, acting through CXCR2, are potent
neutrophil chemoattractants, we investigated their role in mediating hyperoxia-induced lung
injury. Under variable concentrations of oxygen, murine survival during hyperoxia-induced …
Abstract
Hyperoxia-induced lung injury is characterized by infiltration of activated neutrophils in conjunction with endothelial and epithelial cell injury, followed by fibrogenesis. Specific mechanisms recruiting neutrophils to the lung during hyperoxia-induced lung injury have not been fully elucidated. Because CXCL1 and CXCL2/3, acting through CXCR2, are potent neutrophil chemoattractants, we investigated their role in mediating hyperoxia-induced lung injury. Under variable concentrations of oxygen, murine survival during hyperoxia-induced lung injury was dose dependent. Eighty percent oxygen was associated with 50% mortality at 6 days, while greater oxygen concentrations were more lethal. Using 80% oxygen, we found that lungs harvested at day 6 demonstrated markedly increased neutrophil sequestration and lung injury. Expression of CXCR2 ligands paralleled neutrophil recruitment to the lung and CXCR2 mRNA expression. Inhibition of CXC chemokine ligands/CXCR2 interaction using CXCR2−/− mice exposed to hyperoxia significantly reduced neutrophil sequestration and lung injury, and led to a significant survival advantage as compared with CXCR2+/+ mice. These findings demonstrate that CXC chemokine ligand/CXCR2 biological axis is critical during the pathogenesis of hyperoxia-induced lung injury.
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