The responsiveness of bovine neutrophil L-selectin and CD18 to in vivo glucocorticoid administration was characterized by flow cytometric analysis. Blood was sampled intensively from dairy cows treated for 3 days with placebo, cortisol, or dexamethasone. Immunostaining was performed on whole blood (100 microliters) that was left unstimulated or was stimulated with platelet-activating factor (PAF; 1 microgram/ml blood) prior to incubation with fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated monoclonal antibodies against L-selectin and CD18. Results were expressed as the percentage of positive-staining cells and as mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of those cells. Total leukocyte count and leukocyte differentials were also performed on all blood samples. Dexamethasone caused nearly complete down-regulation of L-selectin (P < .01) on the surface of gated cells and reduced to half the MFI of CD18 (P < .01). Compared with values for the placebo group, dexamethasone began to cause L-selectin down-regulation within 8 h after the first injection and these effects persisted until 48 h after the third injection. This was correlated in time with an acute reduction in the proportion of cells that stained positive for L-selectin (from 98% before dexamethasone injections to a low of 17% by 40 h after the first injection). Dexamethasone also caused leukocytosis and neutrophilia during this time interval. In contrast, CD18 down-regulation was delayed until 16 h after the second dexamethasone injection and persisted for roughly 8 days. However, at no time during the experiment did dexamethasone influence the proportion of gated cells staining positive for CD18 (always 100%). Effects of cortisol were generally similar in pattern to those of dexamethasone but were more subtle and more readily detected when PAF was added to blood prior to immunostaining. These results strongly suggest that one mechanism of the anti-inflammatory action of glucocorticoids is to induce dramatic down-regulation of L-selectin and CD18 adhesion molecules on blood neutrophils.
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