Background: Alterations in body temperature may influence immune system function and consequently affect the risk of infection and inflammatory diseases. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria induces production of inflammatory cytokines after ligand binding to Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) on immune cells (especially monocytes/ macrophages). Our aim was to explore how clinically relevant hypo- and hyperthermia affect this signalling in an ex vivo whole blood model, and investigate if the cytokine response was correlated with monocyte TLR4 expression level.
Methods: Blood from 11 healthy volunteers was incubated with LPS 10 ng/ml for 6 h at 33, 37 or 40°C. The concentrations of selected pro-inflammatory (tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin (IL)-1β) and anti-inflammatory (IL-10) cytokines were measured in plasma, and the surface expression of TLR4 was quantified on CD14 + monocytes.
Results: Monocyte TLR4 expression and plasma IL-1β were inversely related to temperature. The TNF-α production was unaffected by hypothermia but increased significantly during hyperthermia, whereas plasma IL-10 was significantly reduced during both hypo- and hyperthermic incubation. No correlation was found between TLR4 expression and cytokine concentrations. During hypothermia, the TNF-α/IL-10 and IL-1β/IL-10 ratios increased seven and nine times, respectively. Hyperthermia increased the TNF-α/IL-10 ratio, but to a lesser extent (doubling), whereas the IL-1β/IL-10 ratio remained unchanged.
Conclusion: Hypothermia significantly changed the cytokine ratios in the pro-inflammatory direction. In comparison, the effect of hyperthermia was sparse, with a modest increase in the TNF-α/IL-10 ratio only. No association was found between LPS-stimulated cytokine production and TLR4 expression on CD14 + monocytes.