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Title: The role of extracellular bactericidal factors in pulmonary host defense. Author: Coonrod JD. Journal: Semin Respir Infect; 1986 Jun; 1(2):118-29. PubMed ID: 3317603. Abstract: Extracellular killing provides an attractive hypothesis to explain the rapid alveolar killing of inhaled bacterial pathogens in the absence of conventional opsonins for phagocytosis. Some evidence of extracellular killing of inhaled pneumococci has been obtained using histologic studies and bronchoalveolar lavage. Although studies of the antimicrobial activity of lung lavage fluid in vitro have given variable results, a variety of antimicrobial factors have been detected in lung lavage fluids. Studies of lysozyme, peptides, iron binding proteins, free fatty acids and other factors that are found free in lung lavage fluid indicate that some of these factors could be a part of extracellular pulmonary host defenses. However, their precise role is not known. A survey of mechanisms of extracellular killing shows that granulocytes, monocytes, macrophages, and T lymphocytes all have the capacity to kill extracellularly in vitro in some circumstances. It remains to be determined which of these diverse mechanisms operate within the lung and how they function in relationship to other host defenses.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]