Effect of α2-adrenergic agonists and antagonists on cytokine release from human lung macrophages cultured in vitro
Date
2016Author
Piazza, Ornella
Staiano, Rosaria I.
De Robertis, Edoardo
Conti, Guido
Di Crescenzo, Vincenzo
Loffredo, Stefania
Marone, Giancarlo
Zito Marinosci, Geremia
Cataldi, Mauro
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The most trusted hypothesis to explain
how α2-adrenergic agonists may preserve pulmonary
functions in critically ill patients is that they directly
act on macrophages by interfering with an
autocrine/paracrine adrenergic system that controls
cytokine release through locally synthetized
noradrenaline and α1- and α2-adrenoreceptors. We
tested this hypothesis in primary cultures of resident
macrophages from human lung (HLMs). HLMs were
isolated by centrifugation on percoll gradients from
macroscopically healthy human lung tissue obtained
from four different patients at the time of lung
resection for cancer. HLMs from these patients
showed a significant expression of α2A, α2B and
α2C adrenoreceptors both at the mRNA and at the
protein level. To evaluate whether α2
adrenoreceptors controlled cytokine release from
HMLs, we measured IL-6, IL-8 and TNF-α
concentrations in the culture medium in basal
conditions and after preincubation with several α2-
adrenergic agonists or antagonists. Neither the
pretreatment with the α2-adrenergic agonists
clonidine, medetomidine or dexdemetomidine or
with the α2-adrenergic antagonist yohimbine caused
significant changes in the response of any of these
cytokines to LPS. These results show that, different
from what reported in rodents, clonidine and
dexdemetomidine do not directly suppress cytokine
release from human pulmonary macrophages. This
suggests that alternative mechanisms such as effects
on immune cells activation or the modulation of
autonomic neurotransmission could be responsible
for the beneficial effects of these drugs on lung
function in critical patients.