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IMMUNE RESPONSE

 

 

 


THE IMMUNE RESPONSE IN BURN INJURY

AUTHORS: Andrew M. Munster, M.D.

 

THE MACROPHAGE

Macrophages are part of a vast system of fixed and circulating cells which mount a rapid, nonspecific biological response to injury, including burns, and interact with lymphocytes and other cells. The objective of the response is to restore homeostasis and eliminate foreign matter. Also part of this system are blood monocytes, endothelial cells, Langerhans cells in the skin, Kupffer cells in the liver, and fibroblasts, although not all of these cells secrete the same products or share the same receptors. Macrophages mediate the acute inflammatory reaction which follows injury and are phagocytic, and upon induction, secrete cytokines which are responsible for the clinical picture of inflammation and “sepsis” with its attendant complications. The most important receptors and products of macrophages are illustrated below:

Two Important Principles: the induction of the macrophage itself is uncertain, but almost certainly it happens through the Neuroendocrine system. Injury stimulates the nerve endings to produce a neuropeptide for which the macrophage has a receptor, initiating the inflammatory reaction. Second, it is believed that following severe burns there is an overreaction of the system which, rather than restoring homeostasis, becomes life-threatening.


Lymphocytes, Macrophages, Monocytes and other cells which make a large number soluble products involved in the inflammatory and immune response. The principal ones are listed below.


Principal Products Involved in the   Inflammatory/immune Response

NAME PRODUCED BY FUNCTION

TNF, tumor necrosis factor  

Macrophages

Monocytes

Maturation of macrophages & neutrophils, upregulation of adhesion molecules,

­ vascular permeability  

IL-1, Interleukin-1  

Macrophages

Monocytes

Keratinocytes

Neutrophils

B-cells

Endothelial cells  

T & B Cell proliferation & activation, fever, profeolysis, ­ vascular permeability

IL-2, Interleukin-2

T-cells

Lymphocyte activation  
IL-4, Interleukin-4

T-cells, B-cells

Mast cells

Basophils

Fibroblasts

B-cell proliferation and antibody-mediated immunity

IL-6, Interleukin-6

Macrophages

Monocytes

Fibroblasts

Keratinocytes  

Stimulation of acute-phase proteins, B-cell differentiation

IL-8, Interleukin-8

Macrophages

Monocytes

T & B-cells

Endothelial cells

Keratinocytes

Hepatocytes

Angiogenesis, chemotaxis granulocyte activation

Protection from apoptosis

IL-10, Interleukin-10

B-cells

Monocytes

Macrophages

T & B cell growth, inhibition of IL-1, TNF & IL-6 production
IL-12, Interleukin-12 Macrophages NK & T-cell differentiation
IL-18, Interleukin-18

Macrophages

Deudoitic cells

Enhancement of IFN production
IFN?, Interfeon-gamma

T-cells

Macrophages

Anti viral, ­ oxidative burst in macrophages

THE PHENOMENON OF ADHESION: ADHESION MOLECULES

All immunologically competent cells, including lymphocytes, macrophages and neutrophils, move or traffic constantly between the bloodstream, the lymphatic system, and the site of inflammation. To reach sites of inflammation, these cells have to adhere to the endothelium and then transmigrate out of the capillary. This capability is conferred by a complex series of adhesion receptors on endothelial cells and migrating cells as well as chemoattractant molecules or chemokines made at the site. Selectins govern rolling and tethering, ICAM 1 and 2 are involved in adhesion triggering and arrest, and ICAM-1 and Mac-1 and LFA-1 are responsible for firm adhesion and transmigration.

THE NEUTROPHIL

The principal phagocytic cell in the system for bacteria, the neutrophil kills by phagocytosing and then engulfing microorganisms in its lysosome which contains highly toxic products, inclusing oxygen-free radicals such as superoxide. To do its work, the neutrophil expresses a number of receptors which are illustrated below:


NAME AND FUNCTION TABLE HERE.

NAME FUNCTION
BPI (Bactericidal/permeability increasing protein) Weakens bacterial cell wall
CD 11 Adhesion
CD 16 Receptor for Fc fragment of Immunoglobulin
CD 35 Binds complement
IL-8 Granulocyte activation, migration, protection from apoptosis

APOPTOSIS: PROGRAMMED CELL DEATH

Immunologically competent cells are short-lived. They age quickly, then they die by an orderly process called apoptosis. Here, the nucleus shuts down, manufacturing of products stops, and the cell quietly dies. The alternative is necrosis, where the noxious process going on around the cell gains the upper hand and ruptures the cell membrane first: here, toxic  products such as super oxide made by the cell pour out into the environment causing major damage to other cells. Apoptosis may be thought of as a good, orderly, natural process: necrosis of cells is bad for the host.

THE ARACHIDONIC ACID CASCADE

Eicosanoids, derivatives of arachidonic acid, are important mediators in the immunological picture of the burn patient. These substances are ubiquitous: practically every tissue which has membrane phospholipid in its cells makes eicosanoids, the most important among which for this discussion are the prostaglandins. In normal health, prostaglandins play a major part in maintaining homeostasis within the circulation, the brain, the GI tract, and the male and female reproductive systems. The difference between classic hormones and prostaglandins is that prostaglandins are not normally transported in blood: their effects are local.

Derangements of the system following burn injury are common and have important effects on immunity, which will be discussed later. The following diagram depicts a simplified system of how prostaglandins are synthetised and degraded.


 

 


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