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The role of complement in inflammation during experimental pneumococcal meningitis
Authors:E Tuomanen  B Hengstler  O Zak  A Tomasz
Affiliation:Laboratory of Microbiology, Rockefeller University, New York, N.Y. 10021.
Abstract:The mechanism whereby an effective bactericidal inflammatory reaction develops in the subarachnoid space is not clearly defined. While normal cerebrospinal fluid is deficient in complement, immunoglobulin and leukocytes, these serum components appear in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) during the course of bacterial meningitis. Using a rabbit model of pneumococcal meningitis we examined the role of the alternate complement pathway in three early events important to the defense of the subarachnoid space: leukocyte chemotaxis, phagocyte mediated bacterial killing, and clearance of bacterial components from the cerebrospinal fluid space. Rabbits treated with cobra venom factor to deplete complement were inoculated intracisternally with encapsulated (type II or XIX) pneumococci. Following complement depletion, there was a dramatic (at least 100-fold) decrease in the LD50 for these strains. Nevertheless, complement depletion did not affect the magnitude of CSF leucocytosis or the rate of clearance of bacterial particles from CSF. A short delay in the appearance of leukocytes in CSF was found in the absence of complement. The major effect of complement depletion, however, was to diminish the efficiency of leukocyte mediated killing of encapsulated bacteria in the CSF. Although the short delay in the onset of leukocytosis in the complement depleted animals is consistent with a chemotactic role of complement in the normal animal, the quantitatively normal leukocytosis in the complement depleted rabbits clearly indicates that important chemotaxins other than complement function in CSF. Inhibition of leukocytosis by indomethacin and diclofenac suggests that metabolite(s) of the arachidonic acid pathway may perform such a chemotactic role. A major role of complement in the defense of the subarachnoid space appears to be as an opsonin needed for the effective bactericidal activity of leukocytes. It is the lack of this function that best explains the greatly decreased LD50 value of encapsulated pneumococci in the complement depleted animal.
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