Search results for "Mononuclear cell infiltration"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Analysis of parathyroid graft rejection suggests alloantigen-specific production of nitric oxide by iNOS-positive intragraft macrophages
2009
Abstract Background During acute rejection of organ or tissue allografts T cells and macrophages are dominant infiltrating cells. CD4-positive T cells are important for the induction of allograft rejection and macrophages are important effector cells mediating cytotoxicity via production of nitric oxide (NO) by the inducible NO-synthase (iNOS). In the present study we analysed whether the destruction of primarily nonvascularised parathyroid allografts is also mediated by iNOS-positive macrophages. Methods Hypocalcaemic Lewis rats received parathyroid isografts (from Lewis donors) and allografts (from Wistar Furth donors), respectively, under the kidney capsule. Levels of serum calcium above…
A critical role for TNFα in the selective attachment of mononuclear leukocytes to angiotensin-II-stimulated arterioles
2007
Abstract Angiotensin II (Ang-II) exerts inflammatory activity and is involved in different cardiovascular disorders. This study has evaluated the involvement of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) in the leukocyte accumulation elicited by Ang-II. Ang-II (1 nM intraperitoneally in rats) induced TNFα release at 1 hour followed by neutrophil and mononuclear cell recruitment. The administration of an antirat TNFα antiserum had no effect on Ang-IIinduced neutrophil accumulation but inhibited the infiltration of mononuclear cells and reduced CC chemokine content in the peritoneal exudate. Pretreatment with either an anti-TNFα or an anti-IL-4 antiserum decreased Ang-II-induced arteriolar mononuclea…
CXCR2 blockade impairs angiotensin II-induced CC chemokine synthesis and mononuclear leukocyte infiltration.
2007
Objective—Angiotensin II (Ang-II) and mononuclear leukocytes are involved in atherosclerosis. This study reports the inhibition of Ang-II–induced mononuclear cell recruitment by CXCR2 antagonism and the mechanisms involved.Methods and Results—Ang-II (1 nmol/L, i.p. in rats) induced CXC and CC chemokines, followed by neutrophil and mononuclear cell recruitment. Administration of the CXCR2 antagonist, SB-517785-M, inhibited the infiltration of both neutrophils (98%) and mononuclear cells (60%). SB-517785-M had no effect on the increase in CXC chemokine levels but reduced MCP-1, RANTES, and MIP-1α release by 66%, 63%, and 80%, respectively. Intravital microscopy showed that pretreatment with S…