Release of reactive nitrogen intermediates from the peripheral blood-derived monocytes/macrophages of leprosy patients stimulated in vitro by tuftsin

1997 
The production of reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) by macrophages is critical to host defence, particularly for exerting the bactericidal and tumoricidal properties. Nitric oxide (NO) were measured in the peripheral blood-derived monocytes/macrophages of normal and leprosy patients (BT/TT and BL/LL) in the presence and absence of 'tuftsin' as a function of in vitro culture age (on 1, 3, 7 days). Macrophages from both groups of leprosy patients were able to produce NO during the unstimulated state but only BL/LL macrophages could be activated by tuftsin to produce significantly high levels of NO. This increase was highest on day 1, then gradually decreased with in vitro culture age. Surprisingly, tuftsin was unable to enhance the NO production in normal macrophages above the basal level. Further, normal and BT/TT macrophages had only Cu-Zn derived superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity whereas BL/LL cultures has Cu-Zn and Mn derived SOD activity. These studies indicate that in BL/LL cultures: a, apart from tuftsin, some additional signal is required to activate nitric oxide synthase (NOS) gene for NO production; and b, Mn-SOD produced by Mycobacterium leprae is playing a defensive role against toxic-free radicals. The final outcome of this mechanism is the survival of M. leprae inside the macrophages.
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