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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Levofloxacin kills Chlamydia pneumoniae and modulates interleukin 6 production by HEp-2 cells.

BACKGROUND: Chlamydia pneumoniae is known to cause acute respiratory infection and more recently it has been studied as a pathogen causing inflammatory changes in chronic diseases such as atherosclerosis. This study addresses the antichlamydial effect of levofloxacin and its role in modulation of a proinflammatory cytokine IL-6 production by uninfected and infected HEp-2 cells. METHODS: HEp-2 cell monolayers were infected with previously prepared and frozen aliquots of C.pneumoniae [1 x 10(3) inclusion-forming units (IFU)/ml] by centrifugation for 30 min and incubation at 37 degrees C for 1 h. Infected monolayers were treated with levofloxacin (3 or 8 microg/ml) immediately after infection (0 h) or 24 h after infection. Monolayers were examined daily for 96 h after infection by counting inclusions with fluorescently labeled antichlamydial monoclonal antibody. Aliquots of disrupted monolayers were titrated to determine the numbers of viable C. pneumoniae IFU/ml. IL-6 concentrations in cell supernatants were determined by ELISA assays. RESULTS: Infected HEp-2 cells produced IL-6. Noninfected HEp-2 cells demonstrated modulation of IL-6 production by levofloxacin. No viable C. Pneumoniae were detected in infected HEp-2 cells when the monolayer was treated with levofloxacin immediately after infection (0 h). In contrast, when cells were treated 24 h after infection, a gradual decline in the number of viable C. pneumoniae occurred; by 96 h into the assay >or=98% of C. pneumoniae were killed. IL-6 concentrations were similar in the supernatants of levofloxacin-treated and nontreated HEp-2 cells. CONCLUSIONS: (1). Levofloxacin is effective in eliminating C. pneumoniae from infected HEp-2 cells; (2). although levofloxacin modulates the production of IL-6 in untreated HEp-2 cells, no evidence for such modulation was observed in HEp-2 cells infected with C. pneumoniae. (3). Presence of viable C. pneumoniae may not be necessary for IL-6 production by infected and treated HEp-2 cells.[1]

References

  1. Levofloxacin kills Chlamydia pneumoniae and modulates interleukin 6 production by HEp-2 cells. Baltch, A.L., Smith, R.P., Ritz, W.J., Carpenter-Knaggs, A., Michelsen, P.B., Carlyn, C.J., Bopp, L.H., Hibbs, J.R. Chemotherapy. (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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