Critical involvement of transmembrane tumor necrosis factor-α in endothelial programmed cell death mediated by ionizing radiation and bacterial endotoxin

Günther Eissner, Franz Kohlhuber, Matthias Grell, Marius Ueffing, Peter Scheurich, Anja Hieke, Gabriele Multhoff, Georg W. Bornkamm, Ernst Holler

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

160 Scopus citations

Abstract

In this report, we show that ionizing radiation (IR) at a clinically relevant dose (4 Gy) causes apoptosis in macrovascular and microvascular human endothelial cells. Treatment of irradiated cells with a low dose of bacterial endotoxin (LPS), similar to the levels observed in serum during endotoxemia, enhanced the rate of apoptosis, although LPS alone was unable to induce programmed cell death. The cytokine and endotoxin antagonist interleukin-10 (IL-10) reduced the rate of LPS + IR-induced apoptosis to levels obtained with irradiation alone. Using neutralizing antibodies against tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF), we could show crucial involvement of TNF in the LPS-mediated enhancement of IR-induced apoptosis, but not in the IR- induced apoptosis per se. However, further analysis strongly suggested the transmembrane form of TNF (mTNF), but not soluble TNF, to be accountable for the LPS-mediated cytotoxic effects. Studies with anatagonistic receptor specific antibodies clearly showed that TNF receptor type I (TR60) is essential and sufficient to elicit this effect. These findings are of potential clinical importance because they may disclose a relevant mechanism that leads to endothelial damage after radiotherapy or total body irradiation used for conditioning in bone marrow transplantation and that may thus contribute to transplant related complications, especially in association with endotoxemia or related inflammatory states.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4184-4193
Number of pages10
JournalBlood
Volume86
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 1995

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Critical involvement of transmembrane tumor necrosis factor-α in endothelial programmed cell death mediated by ionizing radiation and bacterial endotoxin'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this