Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.

Macrophages are often considered the sentries in innate immunity, sounding early immunological alarms, a function which speeds the response to infection. Compared to the large volume of studies on regulation of macrophage function by pathogens or cytokines, relatively little attention has been devot...

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Main Authors: Chen-Ting Lee, Lingwen Zhong, Thomas A Mace, Elizabeth A Repasky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254634?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-863c2d697db3437abababd04989d76162020-11-25T01:46:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0171e3007710.1371/journal.pone.0030077Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.Chen-Ting LeeLingwen ZhongThomas A MaceElizabeth A RepaskyMacrophages are often considered the sentries in innate immunity, sounding early immunological alarms, a function which speeds the response to infection. Compared to the large volume of studies on regulation of macrophage function by pathogens or cytokines, relatively little attention has been devoted to the role of physical parameters such as temperature. Given that temperature is elevated during fever, a long-recognized cardinal feature of inflammation, it is possible that macrophage function is responsive to thermal signals. To explore this idea, we used LPS to model an aseptic endotoxin-induced inflammatory response in BALB/c mice and found that raising mouse body temperature by mild external heat treatment significantly enhances subsequent LPS-induced release of TNF-α into the peritoneal fluid. It also reprograms macrophages, resulting in sustained subsequent responsiveness to LPS, i.e., this treatment reduces "endotoxin tolerance" in vitro and in vivo. At the molecular level, elevating body temperature of mice results in a increase in LPS-induced downstream signaling including enhanced phosphorylation of IKK and IκB, NF-κB nuclear translocation and binding to the TNF-α promoter in macrophages upon secondary stimulation. Mild heat treatment also induces expression of HSP70 and use of HSP70 inhibitors (KNK437 or Pifithrin-µ) largely abrogates the ability of the thermal treatment to enhance TNF-α, suggesting that the induction of HSP70 is important for mediation of thermal effects on macrophage function. Collectively, these results support the idea that there has been integration between the evolution of body temperature regulation and macrophage function that could help to explain the known survival benefits of fever in organisms following infection.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254634?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chen-Ting Lee
Lingwen Zhong
Thomas A Mace
Elizabeth A Repasky
spellingShingle Chen-Ting Lee
Lingwen Zhong
Thomas A Mace
Elizabeth A Repasky
Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Chen-Ting Lee
Lingwen Zhong
Thomas A Mace
Elizabeth A Repasky
author_sort Chen-Ting Lee
title Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
title_short Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
title_full Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
title_fullStr Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
title_full_unstemmed Elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
title_sort elevation in body temperature to fever range enhances and prolongs subsequent responsiveness of macrophages to endotoxin challenge.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Macrophages are often considered the sentries in innate immunity, sounding early immunological alarms, a function which speeds the response to infection. Compared to the large volume of studies on regulation of macrophage function by pathogens or cytokines, relatively little attention has been devoted to the role of physical parameters such as temperature. Given that temperature is elevated during fever, a long-recognized cardinal feature of inflammation, it is possible that macrophage function is responsive to thermal signals. To explore this idea, we used LPS to model an aseptic endotoxin-induced inflammatory response in BALB/c mice and found that raising mouse body temperature by mild external heat treatment significantly enhances subsequent LPS-induced release of TNF-α into the peritoneal fluid. It also reprograms macrophages, resulting in sustained subsequent responsiveness to LPS, i.e., this treatment reduces "endotoxin tolerance" in vitro and in vivo. At the molecular level, elevating body temperature of mice results in a increase in LPS-induced downstream signaling including enhanced phosphorylation of IKK and IκB, NF-κB nuclear translocation and binding to the TNF-α promoter in macrophages upon secondary stimulation. Mild heat treatment also induces expression of HSP70 and use of HSP70 inhibitors (KNK437 or Pifithrin-µ) largely abrogates the ability of the thermal treatment to enhance TNF-α, suggesting that the induction of HSP70 is important for mediation of thermal effects on macrophage function. Collectively, these results support the idea that there has been integration between the evolution of body temperature regulation and macrophage function that could help to explain the known survival benefits of fever in organisms following infection.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254634?pdf=render
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