2010
DOI: 10.1152/ajpendo.00084.2010
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T cells from burn-injured mice demonstrate a loss of sensitivity to glucocorticoids

Abstract: . T cells from burn-injured mice demonstrate a loss of sensitivity to glucocorticoids.

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…However, it is undetermined whether p38 MAPK regulates the sensitivity of structural lung tissues, such as ASM, to GC therapy. A similar role of p38 MAPK in regulating GC sensitivity has been described in mice overexpressing p38 MAPK, which have a reduced GC responsiveness to burn injury (25), or in Crohn's disease, where p38 MAPK activity is significantly increased in colonic tissues from GC-resistant patients when compared with GC-sensitive patients (26). The implication of p38 MAPK in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease was further confirmed by the marked improvement of the disease in patients treated with p38 MAPK inhibitors (27).…”
supporting
confidence: 56%
“…However, it is undetermined whether p38 MAPK regulates the sensitivity of structural lung tissues, such as ASM, to GC therapy. A similar role of p38 MAPK in regulating GC sensitivity has been described in mice overexpressing p38 MAPK, which have a reduced GC responsiveness to burn injury (25), or in Crohn's disease, where p38 MAPK activity is significantly increased in colonic tissues from GC-resistant patients when compared with GC-sensitive patients (26). The implication of p38 MAPK in the pathogenesis of Crohn's disease was further confirmed by the marked improvement of the disease in patients treated with p38 MAPK inhibitors (27).…”
supporting
confidence: 56%
“…The blood sampling was performed within 12 h of injury, making these results representative for the inflammatory phase before any infection of the injuries was likely to have occurred. The up‐regulation of GR expression is coherent with earlier experimental results showing an increased GR expression in splenic T lymphocytes from burn‐injured mice, although this increase was observed 10 days after injury. The observed increased GR expression may be a direct effect of the immediate inflammatory response following burn injury.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This suggests that a subset of GR-insensitive T lymphocytes could have been recruited into brain tissue following WNV infection and raises the possibility that brain inflammation in response to WNV may be destructive because the infiltrating leukocytes that cause the tissue damage lack the molecular machinery to respond to endogenous glucocorticoids that dampen inflammation. These results are similar to a previous report showing down-regulation of GR, MR, and ERα gene expression in microglia following inflammatory challenge in the brain (Sierra et al, 2008) but differ from a study showing an increase in GR expression and decrease in glucocorticoid sensitivity in splenic T cells of mice following thermal injury (D'Elia et al, 2010). Indeed, we also found that mice exposed to the lethal toxin of Clostridium sordellii exhibited lymphoid depletion in splenic tissue and apoptosis in thymic tissue, which is consistent with patterns of glucocorticoid-induced immune cell apoptosis.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%