Chemotactic Activity of CXC Chemokines Interleukin‐8, Growth‐Related Oncogene–α, and Epithelial Cell–Derived Neutrophil‐Activating Protein–78 in Urine of Patients with Urosepsis

Abstract
CXC chemokines are chemotactic cytokines that specifically act on neutrophils. To obtain insight into the extent of local production of CXC chemokines during acute pyelonephritis, interleukin (IL)—8, growth-related oncogene (GRO)—α, and epithelial cell—derived neutrophilactivating protein (ENA)—78 were measured in urine and plasma samples from patients with culture-proven urosepsis (n = 33), healthy human control subjects with sterile urine (n = 31), and human volunteers intravenously injected with endotoxin (n = 11). Patients had profoundly elevated urine concentrations of chemokines with no (GRO-α and ENA-78) or little (IL-8) elevation in plasma. Endotoxin-challenged subjects demonstrated transient increases in plasma chemokine concentrations, with no (GRO-α) or little (IL-8 and ENA-78) elevation in urine. Urine from patients exerted chemotactic activity toward neutrophils, which was partially inhibited by neutralizing antibodies against IL-8, GRO-α, or ENA-78. During urosepsis, CXC chemokines are predominantly produced within the urinary tract, where they are involved in the recruitment of neutrophils to the urinary compartment.