Recent studies suggest that increased activation-induced lymphocyte apoptosis (AICD) is detected in mouse splenocytes during polymicrobial sepsis which may contribute to lymphocyte immune dysfunction [i,e,, decreased interleukin (IL-)2 and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production] leading to the associated morbidity seen in those animals. Thus, we wanted to examine the hypothesis that immune suppressive agents, such as IL-4, IL-10 or prostaglandin E-2 (PGE(2)), known to be elevated in septic animals, also contribute to this increase in AICD, Here we demonstrate that the inclusion of monoclonal antibody (mAb) to IL-10, but not anti-IL-4 or ibuprofen (IBU), blunted this sepsis induced increase in splenocyte AICD, Additionally, septic mice deficient in the IL-10 gene product(-/-) showed neither an increase in AICD nor a loss of IL-2/IFN-gamma release capacity. Interestingly, mAb to IL-10 did not altered the extent of AICD in a Th-2-cell line, but exogenous IL-10 did potentiate Th-1-like cell line AICD, This was consistent with the finding that the increased AICD seen in septic mouse splenocytes was restricted largely to the CD4(+) cells producing IL-2 (Th-1-cells) and that mAb to IL-10 treatment suppressed this change. Furthermore, IL-10 appears to mediate its AICD effect by upregulation of the Fas receptor and Fas receptor signaling protein components, but not by altered expression of Bcl/Bax/Bad family members, in septic mouse splenocytes, To the extent that these processes contribute in a pathological fashion to the animal's capacity tee survive sepsis we have previously observed that in vivo post-treatment of mice with mAb IL-10 markedly attenuated septic mortality. Collectively, these data indicate that in the septic mouse the Th-2 cytokine IL-10 not only serves to actively induce Th-1 lymphocyte immune dysfunction but also plays a role in their apoptotic depletion. These processes in turn appear to contribute to the animal's inability to ward off lethal septic challenge. (C) 2001 Academic Press.