Chemokines and expression of their receptors in BAL samples of infants with RSV infection (CROSBI ID 577267)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
Vojvoda, Valerija ; Bendelja, Krešo ; Roglić, Srđan ; Tešović, Goran ; Rabatić, Sabina
engleski
Chemokines and expression of their receptors in BAL samples of infants with RSV infection
Virtually all infants experience respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection by their second year of life. Some of them are hospitalized due to development of bronchiolitis. This is often accompanied by mucus and cell debris accumulation in the lungs which closes airways and unable proper breathing and results inhigher respiratory frequency and lower blood oxygen saturation. In those cases, bronchoscopy and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) collecting is made as therapeutic procedure that should help clean airways and allow patients to breathe easily. RSV infects lung epithelial cells causing local secretion of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Chemokines are responsible for the recruitment of different lymphocyte populations via chemokine receptors implicatinbg their role in diseases resolution or exaggeration of the immune response. Moreover certain chemokines could be related to the type of adaptive immune response (Th1/Th2) determining disease pathology. In orther to complete our previous results of systemic chemokine/chemokine receptor profile in acute RSV infection, we have tested collected BAL samples for chemokine concentrations (IP-10, MIG, MDC TARC, fractalkine) by commertially available ELISAs. Isolated BAL cells were enriched for lymphocyte subsets by adhesion, which were then immunostained for chemokine receptor expression. RSV infection predominantly induces secretion of IP-10/MIG in the airways which is necessary for efficient viral clearance. Moreover this chemokines are typically related to beneficial Th1 immune response but also could mount disease severity. TARC/MDC levels were below test sensitivity. This chemokines are connected to Th2 immune response, but also seems to have protective role during RSV infection.
RSV; BAL; chemokine; chemokine receptors; infants; IP-10; TARC; CXCR3; CX3CR1; CCR4
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Podaci o prilogu
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Podaci o skupu
P3AGI Summer School: Animal Models of Allergic Diseases
predavanje
21.06.2011-23.06.2011
Beč, Austrija