Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2022)

Compartment-Specific Differences in the Activation of Monocyte Subpopulations Are Not Affected by Nitric Oxide and Glucocorticoid Treatment in a Model of Resuscitated Porcine Endotoxemic Shock

  • Tomasz Skirecki,
  • Barbara Adamik,
  • Claes Frostell,
  • Urszula Pasławska,
  • Stanisław Zieliński,
  • Natalia Glatzel-Plucińska,
  • Mateusz Olbromski,
  • Piotr Dzięgiel,
  • Waldemar Gozdzik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11092641
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 2641

Abstract

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Inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) remains one of the treatment modalities in shock, and in addition to its vasoactive properties, iNO exerts immunomodulatory effects. We used a porcine model of endotoxemia with shock resuscitation (control) and additional treatment with iNO and a steroid (treatment group). After 20 h, bone marrow (BM), peripheral blood (PB), and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were collected to analyze the immunophenotype and mitochondrial membrane potential (Δφ) in three subsets of monocytes. In both groups, SLA-DR expression decreased twofold on the circulating CD14+CD163+ and CD14−CD163+ monocytes, while it did not change on the CD14+CD163+. Δφ increased only in the CD14−CD163+ subpopulation (0.8 vs. 2.0, p +CD163+ and CD14−CD163+ monocytes expressed SLA-DR, and it was higher compared to PB (32% and 20%, p p +CD163+ had a threefold higher Δφ than PB and BM monocytes, while the Δφ of the other subsets was highest in PB monocytes. We confirmed the compartmentalization of the monocyte response during endotoxemic shock, which highlights the importance of studying tissue-resident cells in addition to their circulating counterparts. The iNO/steroid treatment did not further impair monocyte fitness.

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