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-glucan on respiratory infection following exercise stress: role of lung macrophages
1 Division of Applied Physiology, Department of Exercise Science, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, United States
2 Department of Cell Biology, Vrije Universiteit of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
3 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Health Sciences, Lahore, South Carolina, Pakistan
4 Department of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, United States
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: markd{at}gwm.sc.edu.
Exercise stress is associated with an increased risk for URTI. We have shown that consumption of the soluble oat fiber,
-glucan (O
G) can offset the increased risk for infection and decreased macrophage ant-viral resistance following stressful exercise, however, the direct role of macrophages is unknown. This study examined the effect of macrophage depletion on the benefits of orally administered O
G on susceptibility to infection (morbidity, symptom severity and mortality) following exercise stress. Clodronate (Ex-H2O-CL2MDP, Ex-O
G-CL2MDP, Con-H2O-CL2MDP, Con-O
G-CL2MDP) encapsulated liposomes were administered intra-nasally to deplete macrophages, PBS (Ex-H2O-PBS, Ex-O
G-PBS, Con-H2O-PBS, Con-O
G-PBS) encapsulated liposomes were given to macrophage intact groups . Ex mice ran to volitional fatigue on a treadmill for 3 consecutive days and O
G mice were fed a solution of 50% O
G in their drinking water for 10 consecutive days prior to infection. Fifteen minutes following the final bout of Ex or rest mice were intranasally inoculated with 50µl of a standardized dose of HSV-1. Ex increased morbidity (P<0.001) and symptom severity (P<0.05), but not mortality (P=0.09). The increase in morbidity and symptom severity was blocked by O
G consumption for 10 consecutive days prior to exercise and infection (morbidity (P<0.001) and symptom severity (P<0.05)). Depletion of macrophages negated the beneficial effects of O
G on reducing susceptibility to infection following exercise stress, as evidenced by an increase in morbidity (P<0.01) and symptom severity (P<0.05). Results indicate that lung macrophages are at least partially responsible for mediating the beneficial effects of O
G on susceptibility to respiratory infection following exercise stress.
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