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Tumor necrosis factor-alpha in whole blood cultures of preeclamptic patients and healthy pregnant and nonpregnant women.
Authors:Ilse Beckmann  Shlomo Ben Efraim  Monica Vervoort  Wil Visser  Henk C S Wallenburg
Institution:Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. i.dimigen-beckmann@erasmusmc.nl
Abstract:OBJECTIVES: Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) is recognized as a likely mediator of the excessive endothelial activation and injury that is a key pathogenetic mechanism of preeclampsia. We used whole blood cell cultures from 12 patients with severe preeclampsia and from 12 healthy pregnant and nonpregnant women to determine the release of TNF-alpha by unstimulated leukocytes as a measure of their state of activation, and their response to stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as an indicator of their state of priming. METHODS: Blood was cultivated without and with LPS, and TNF-alpha release was measured after six and 24 hours of cultivation by enzyme-linked immunoassays. Differential leukocyte counts were performed, and TNF-alpha values calculated per 10(5) monocytes. RESULTS: In unstimulated whole blood cultures, TNF-alpha release after six hours of cultivation was similar in all three groups; but after 24 hours, TNF-alpha concentrations in culture supernatants from preeclamptic patients were significantly higher than were values obtained in blood from normotensive pregnant women. In LPS-stimulated blood cultures with a maximum of TNF-alpha release at six hours cultivation time, TNF-alpha concentrations were significantly lower in preeclamptic women than they were in both control groups. We showed in an additional experiment that a strong LPS challenge following preactivation with high doses of LPS resulted in reduced release of TNF-alpha compared with release of TNF-alpha following preactivation with low doses of LPS. CONCLUSIONS: The observed high capacity for spontaneous TNF-alpha release by leukocytes in preeclampsia indicates activation of TNF-alpha producing leukocytes by the disease process. Preactivation and exhaustion of leukocytes by leakage of TNF-alpha could lead to the reduced response to TNF-alpha inducer LPS as observed in blood cultures from preeclamptic patients.
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