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Acute inflammation 3. By Dr. S. Homathy. This is augmented by slowing of the blood flow and increased vascular permeability, fluid leaves the vessel causing leukocytes to settle-out of the central flow column and “ marginate ” along the endothelial surface
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Acute inflammation 3 By Dr. S. Homathy
This is augmented by slowing of the blood flow and increased vascular permeability, • fluid leaves the vessel causing • leukocytes to settle-out of the central flow column • and “marginate” along the endothelial surface • Leucocytes accumulate at the periphery of vessels • Margination
Normal flow • stasis
Rolling • Endothelial cells and leukocytes have complementary surface adhesion molecules • which briefly stick and release causing the leukocyte to roll along the endothelium • like a tumbleweed until • it eventually comes to a stop as mutual adhesion reaches a peak
Rolling • Then WBC tumble on the endothelial surface • Transiently sticking along the way- rolling • Lose and transient adhesions are mediated by the selectin family of molecules • Selectins are receptor expressed on leukocytes and endothelium • They bind to the selectin sugars • E-selectin - endothelium • P-selectin - endothelium and Platelets • L-selectin - leukocytes
They are expressed at low level / absent on normal cells • They are up- regulated after stimulation by specific mediaters. • upregulated on endothelium by cytokines (TNF, IL-1) at injury sites
Adhesion • Rolling comes to a stop and adhesion results before leukocytes crawling between endothelial cells • The firm adhesionis mediated by molecules of immunoglobulin superfamily
The molecules participate are: • Endothelial: ICAM-1, VCAM-1 • Leukocyte: LFA-1, Mac-1, VLA-4 (ICAM-1 binds LFA-1/Mac-1, VCAM-1 binds VLA-4) • Ordinarily down-regulated or in an inactive conformation, but inflammation alters this • Cytokines –TNF and IL-1induce the expression of both ICAM-1 and VCAM-1
Transmigration (Diapedesis) • Occurs after firm adhesion within the systemic venules and pulmonary capillaries via PECAM –1 (CD31) • Must then cross basement membrane • Leukocytes cross the BM by focally degrading them with secreted • Collagenases • Integrins
Early in inflammatory response mostly PMNs, • but as cytokine and chemotactic signals change with progression of inflammatory response, • alteration of endothelial cell adhesion molecule expression • activates other populations of leukocytes to adhere (monocytes, lymphocytes, etc)
In most acute inflammatory lesions PNL predominate in the first 6-24 hrs • Then replaced by monocytes in 24-48 hrs • Neutrophils undergo apoptosis within 24-48 hrs of exiting the blood stream
Chemotaxis and Activation • Leukocytes follow chemical gradient to site of injury (chemotaxis) • It is the unidirectional migration of cells towards an attractant • Soluble bacterial products • Complement components (C5a) • Cytokines (chemokine family e.g., IL-8) • LTB4 (AA metabolite)
Chemotactic agents bind surface receptors • inducing calcium mobilization and assembly of cytoskeletal contractile elements
Leukocytes: • extend pseudopods with overlying surface adhesion molecules (integrins) that bind ECM during chemotaxis • undergo activation: • Prepare AA metabolites from phospholipids • Prostaglandin (and thromboxanes) • Leukotrienes • Lipoxins
Prepare for degranulation and release of lysosomal enzymes (oxidative burst) • Regulate leukocyte adhesion molecule affinity as needed
Phagocytosis and Degranulation • Once at site of injury, leukocytes involve several steps: • Recognize and attach • Engulf (form phagocytic vacuole) • Kill (degrade)
Recognition and Binding • Recognition and attachment of leukocytes is facilitated by serum protein- opsonins • Opsonized by serum complement, immunoglobulin (C3b, Fc portion of IgG) • Corresponding receptors on leukocytes (FcR, CR1, 2, 3) leads to binding