Interleukin-6 response to deliberate colonization of the human urinary tract with gram-negative bacteria

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Abstract

Intravesical inoculation of patients with Escherichia coli provided an opportunity to examine the interleukin-6 (IL-6) response to a gram-negative bacterial urinary tract infection in humans. All patients secreted IL-6 as a result of infection. Yrinary IL-6 was not continuously secreted but appeared as a series of similar peaks during the first 48 h after infection. There was no significant difference in the ability to trigger IL-6 secretion between isogenic adhering or nonadhering strains, but a threshold concentration of 105 bacteria per ml of urine was necessary to fully stimulate IL-6 secretion. There was no detectable increase in IL-6 levels in the serum of the colonized individuals, suggesting mainly local IL-6 production. These results demonstrate that IL-6 is a part of the human mucosal response to gram-negative urinary tract infections.

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Hedges, S., Anderson, P., Lidin-Janson, G., De Man, P., & Svanborg, C. (1991). Interleukin-6 response to deliberate colonization of the human urinary tract with gram-negative bacteria. Infection and Immunity, 59(1), 421–427. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.59.1.421-427.1991

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