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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Clinical & Experimental ImmunologyVolume 150 Issue 2, Pages 332 - 339 Published Online: 5 Sep 2007 Journal Compilation © 2010 British Society for Immunology An Official Journal of the British Society for Immunology
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 228K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking ORIGINAL ARTICLE Leptin improves pulmonary bacterial clearance and survival in ob/ob mice during pneumococcal pneumonia Copyright 2007 British Society for Immunology KEYWORDS lipid mediators • lung immunology • neutrophils • nutrition • pneumococcus Summary
The adipocyte-derived hormone leptin is an important regulator of appetite and energy expenditure and is now appreciated for its ability to control innate and adaptive immune responses. We have reported previously that the leptin-deficient ob/ob mouse exhibited increased susceptibility to the Gram-negative bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae. In this report we assessed the impact of chronic leptin deficiency, using ob/ob mice, on pneumococcal pneumonia and examined whether restoring circulating leptin to physiological levels in vivo could improve host defences against this pathogen. We observed that ob/ob mice, compared with wild-type (WT) animals, exhibited enhanced lethality and reduced pulmonary bacterial clearance following Streptococcus pneumoniae challenge. These impairments in host defence in ob/ob mice were associated with elevated levels of lung tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α, macrophage inflammatory peptide (MIP)-2 [correction added after online publication 28 September 2007: definition of MIP corrected], prostaglandin E Accepted for publication 31 July 2007 |