Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic human pathogen that causes both an acute lung disease in patients with hospital-acquired pneumonia and a chronic lung disease in individuals with cystic fibrosis. Many of the pathophysiologic effects of P. aeruginosa infection are due to factors secreted by the bacterium. Conditioned media from cultures of P. aeruginosa increased interleukin-8 expression and decreased regulated on activation, normal T cells expressed and secreted (RANTES) expression by human airway epithelial cells. Both of these activities were present in heat-treated, protease-treated, small molecular weight fractions. The activities were not inhibited by polymyxin B and were not extracted into ethyl acetate, suggesting that they were not due to endotoxin or autoinducer. Conversely, results from chloroform extractions and studies with a phenazine-minus mutant suggested that the blue pigment pyocyanin contributes to these activities when present. In addition to the effects of small molecular weight factors on cytokine expression, proteases in bacterial-conditioned media further decreased levels of RANTES. By altering expression, release, and/or activity of inflammatory cytokines, secretory factors from P. aeruginosa could disrupt the delicate balance that constitutes the immune response to bacterial infection and thus could contribute to the lung damage that occurs in P. aeruginosa-infected airways.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1165/ajrcmb.25.2.4273 | DOI Listing |
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