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1.
Tenascin is an extracellular matrix protein found in adults in T cell-dependent areas of lymphoid tissues, sites of inflammation, and tumors. We report here that it inhibited chemotaxis of chemoattractant-stimulated human monocytes and chemoattractant-stimulated polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) through three-dimensional gels composed of collagen I or Matrigel, and chemotaxis of leukotriene B4-stimulated PMN through fibrin gels. The inhibitory effect of tenascin on monocyte or PMN chemotaxis through these matrices was reversed by Abs directed against alpha5beta1 integrins or by a peptide (GRGDSP) that binds to beta1 integrins. Tenascin did not affect leukotriene B4- or fMLP-stimulated expression of beta1 or beta2 integrins, but did exert a small inhibitory effect on PMN adhesion and closeness of apposition to fibrin(ogen)-containing surfaces. Thus, alpha5beta1 integrins mediate the inhibitory effect of tenascin on monocyte and PMN chemotaxis, without promoting close apposition between these leukocytes and surfaces coated with tenascin alone or with tenascin bound to other matrix proteins. This contrasts with the role played by alpha5beta1 integrins in promoting close apposition between fMLP-stimulated PMN and fibrin containing surfaces, thereby inhibiting chemotaxis of fMLP-stimulated PMN through fibrin gels. Thus, chemoattractants and matrix proteins regulate chemotaxis of phagocytic leukocytes by at least two different mechanisms: one in which specific chemoattractants promote very tight adhesion of leukocytes to specific matrix proteins and another in which specific matrix proteins signal cessation of migration without markedly affecting strength of leukocyte adhesion.  相似文献   

2.
Chemoattractants differ in their capacity to stimulate neutrophils to adhere to and to migrate through matrices containing fibrin. Formyl methionyl leucyl phenylalanine (fMLP) stimulates neutrophils to adhere closely to, but not to migrate into, fibrin gels. Leukotriene B4 (LTB4) stimulates neutrophils to adhere loosely to and to migrate through fibrin gels. We report that alpha5beta1 integrins regulate the different migratory behaviors on fibrin gels of neutrophils in response to these chemoattractants. fMLP, but not LTB4, activated neutrophil beta1 integrins, as measured by binding of mAb 15/7 to an activation epitope on the beta1 integrins. Antibodies or peptides that block alpha5beta1 integrins prevented fMLP-stimulated neutrophils from forming zones of close apposition on fibrin and reversed fMLP's inhibitory effect on neutrophil chemotaxis through fibrin. In contrast, neither peptides nor antibodies that block beta1 integrins affected the capacity of LTB4-stimulated neutrophils to form zones of loose apposition or to migrate through fibrin gels. These results suggest that chemoattractants generate at least two different messages that direct neutrophils, and perhaps other leukocytes, to accumulate at specific anatomic sites: a general message that induces neutrophils to crawl and a specific message that prepares neutrophils to stop when they contact appropriate matrix proteins for activated beta1 integrins.  相似文献   

3.
The protein kinase inhibitor, 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl) piperazine (C-I), inhibits superoxide release from human neutrophils (PMN) stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate or synthetic diacylglycerol, without inhibiting superoxide release from PMN stimulated with the chemoattractants C5a or N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (f-Met-Leu-Phe). In this study, we investigated the effect of C-I on human PMN chemotaxis to C5a, f-Met-Leu-Phe, leukotriene B4 (LTB4), and fluoresceinated N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine-lysine (f-Met-Leu-Phe-Lys-FITC). PMN, preincubated for 5 min at 37 degrees C with 0 to 200 microM C-I, were tested for their migratory responses to the chemoattractants. C-I (greater than or equal to 1 microM) significantly inhibited PMN chemotaxis to f-Met-Leu-Phe, f-Met-Leu-Phe-Lys-FITC, and C5a without affecting random migration. Maximal inhibition of chemotaxis to these attractants occurred with greater than or equal to 50 microM C-I, at which chemotaxis was inhibited by 80 to 95%. The C-I inhibition was reversible. In contrast, 200 microM C-I did not inhibit the number of PMN migrating to LTB4, although, the leading front of PMN migration to LTB4 was inhibited by C-I. C-I inhibited PMN orientation to C5a and f-Met-Leu-Phe without affecting orientation to LTB4. C-I did not inhibit the binding of radiolabeled f-Met-Leu-Phe or f-Met-Leu-Phe-Lys-FITC to PMN. These findings suggest that the chemotactic responses of PMN to f-Met-Leu-Phe and C5a involve a protein kinase-dependent reaction which is inhibited by C-I.  相似文献   

4.
The structure of fibrin plays an important role in the organization of thrombi, the development of atherosclerosis, and restenosis after PTCA. In this study, we examined the mechanisms of the migration of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) into fibrin gels, using an in vitro assay system. Cultured SMCs from bovine fetal aortic media migrated into fibrin gels prepared with thrombin, which cleaves both fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen, without other chemotactic stimuli. Both desA fibrin gels prepared with batroxobin, which cleaves only fibrinopeptide A, and desB fibrin gels prepared with Agkistrodon contortrix thrombin-like enzyme (ACTE), which cleaves only fibrinopeptide B, similarly induced the migration of SMCs compared to fibrin gels prepared with thrombin. These results suggest that the cleavage of fibrinopeptides is not necessary, but rather that the three-dimensional structure of the gel may be important for the migration of SMCs. Furthermore, gels prepared with protamine sulfate, which forms fibrin-like gels non-enzymatically, similarly induced the migration of SMCs compared to the gels prepared with thrombin. Both anti-fibrin(ogen) fragment D and anti-fibrin(ogen) E antibodies inhibited the migration of SMCs into fibrin gels, suggesting that both the D and E domains of fibrin(ogen) are involved in the migration of SMCs into fibrin gels. The addition of GRGDS, a synthetic RGD-containing peptide, but not that of GRGES, a control peptide, partially inhibited the migration of SMCs into fibrin gels, suggesting that the migration of SMCs into fibrin gels is at least in part dependent on the RGD-containing region of the alpha chain. The migration of SMCs into fibrin gels was also inhibited by a monoclonal antibody for integrin alpha v beta 3 and alpha 5 beta 1, indicating that migration is dependent on these integrins. Furthermore, both fibrin(ogen) fragments D and E inhibited the migration of SMCs into fibrin gels, suggesting that these fragments, generated during fibrino(geno)lysis, may be relevant in the regulation of SMC migration into fibrin gels.  相似文献   

5.
SC-41930 was evaluated for effects on human neutrophil chemotaxis and degranulation. At concentrations up to 100 microM, SC-41930 alone exhibited no effect on neutrophil migration, but dose-dependently inhibited neutrophil chemotaxis induced by leukotriene B4 (LTB4) in a modified Boyden chamber. Concentrations of SC-41930 from 0.3 microM to 3 microM competitively inhibited LTB4-induced chemotaxis with a pA2 value of 6.35. While inactive at 10 microM against C5a-induced chemotaxis, SC-41930 inhibited N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP)-induced chemotaxis, with 10 times less potency than against LTB4-induced chemotaxis. SC-41930 inhibited [3H]LTB4 and [3H]fMLP binding to their receptor sites on human neutrophils with KD values of 0.2 microM and 2 microM, respectively. SC-41930 also inhibited neutrophil chemotaxis induced by 20-OH LTB or 12(R)-HETE. At concentrations up to 10 microM, SC-41930 alone did not cause neutrophil degranulation, but inhibited LTB4-induced degranulation in a noncompetitive manner. SC-41930 also inhibited fMLP- or C5a-induced degranulation, but was about 8 and 10 times less effective for fMLP and C5a, respectively. The results indicate that SC-41930 is a human neutrophil LTB4 receptor antagonist with greater specificity for LTB4 than for fMLP or C5a receptors.  相似文献   

6.
Human peripheral monocytes (MO), neutrophils (PMN), and lymphocytes (PBL) were tested for their ability to kill Candida tropicalis. With incubation times between 30 min and 2 h, unstimulated MO and PMN, but not PBL, were efficient killers of C. tropicalis. Both leukocyte subsets were able to kill at minimum 2.5 1 effector to target ratios. Pre-incubation of MO for 24 h with interferon-gamma or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) increased their ability to kill yeast targets. TNF alone had no effect on C. tropicalis targets at concentrations up to 1000 U/ml. PBL activated for 4 d with interleukin-2 did not kill yeast targets. PMN exhibited more cytocidal efficiency per cell than MO in these assays. Direct contact of effectors and targets was required; no significant killing by PMN or MO supernatants was measured. PMN-mediated killing, but not MO killing, was inhibited by a mixture of catalase and Superoxide dismutase suggesting that oxygen-dependent killing mechanisms were partially responsible for candidacidal activity.  相似文献   

7.
Classical chemoattractants such as fMLP or the complement factor C5a use G protein (Gi)-coupled receptors to stimulate both chemotaxis and production of reactive oxygen species (respiratory burst, RB) by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). The chemokine stroma cell-derived factor 1alpha (SDF1alpha) and its Gi-coupled receptor, CXCR4, regulate leukocyte trafficking and recruitment to the synovial fluid of rheumatoid arthritic patients (RA-SF). However, the role of SDF1alpha in the RB is unknown and was studied in this work in vitro with healthy PMN in the absence and presence of RA-SF. In healthy PMN, SDF1alpha failed to stimulate the RB, even though the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase was activated to a similar level as in fMLP-stimulated PMN. In contrast, the SDF1alpha-mediated calcium transients and activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt were partially deficient, while p44/42 mitogen-activated protein kinases were not activated. SDF1alpha actually desensitized weakly the fMLP-mediated RB of healthy PMN. This cross-inhibitory effect was amplified in PMN treated with RA-SF, providing a protection against the exacerbation of RB induced by C5a or fMLP. This SDF1alpha beneficial effect, which was prevented by the CXCR4 antagonist AMD3100, was associated with impairment of C5a- and fMLP-mediated early signaling events. Thus, although SDF1alpha promotes leukocyte emigration into rheumatoid synovium, our data suggest it cross-desensitizes the production of oxidant by primed PMN, a property that may be beneficial in the context of arthritis.  相似文献   

8.
In vitro effect of actinomycin D on human neutrophil function   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of actinomycin D (ACT-D) on human neutrophil chemotaxis, chemiluminescence (CL), superoxide (O2-) production, phagocytic uptake, and intracellular bacterial killing has been examined. The viability of the ACT-D-treated neutrophils was 98% even at a concentration of 10 micrograms/ml for 4 hr. Using fMLP as the chemotactic factor, depressed chemotaxis was demonstrated following ACT-D (1-10 micrograms/ml) pretreatment of neutrophils as compared with the non-treated controls. Similar ACT-D pretreatment produced the depressed responses in phorbol myristate acetate-induced CL and superoxide production by neutrophils. Moreover, using heat-inactivated human serum as an opsonin for Salmonella enteritidis (NCTC 6676), there was a significant difference in intracellular killing (P less than 0.01) but no difference in phagocytic uptake between ACT-D-treated and non-treated neutrophils. These studies indicate that ACT-D profoundly impairs both intracellular bacterial killing by human neutrophil through an effect on respiratory burst activity and directed cell migration of human neutrophils.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the mechanism of action of a derivative of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-D) which specifically and irreversibly inhibits N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP)-induced polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) chemotaxis. At a concentration that completely inhibited PMN chemotaxis, WGA-D had no effect on either the uptake or release of [3H]-FMLP by PMN. Similarly, WGA-D did not affect either the short-term binding to, or internalization by, PMN of a fluoresceinated FMLP analog. WGA-D did interfere, however, with the re-expression (or recycling) of FMLP receptors by PMN that had been preincubated with 1 microM FMLP for 10 min at 4 degrees C. This effect was specific for WGA-D, because it was not observed when concanavalin A was used. Scatchard plot analysis of FMLP binding to PMN after receptor re-expression demonstrated that WGA-D-treated PMN had a significant diminution in the number of high affinity receptors. WGA-D-mediated inhibition of FMLP receptor re-expression was associated with inhibition of FMLP-induced PMN chemotaxis, but had no effect on either FMLP-induced PMN superoxide anion generation or degranulation. Studies using [125I]-WGA-D demonstrated that PMN did not internalize WGA-D spontaneously. PMN did internalize [125I]-WGA-D, however, when stimulated with FMLP. Internalization of WGA-D by FMLP-stimulated PMN was rapid, dependent on the concentration of FMLP, and specific. Internalization of [125I]-WGA-D by PMN did not occur when highly purified human C5a, instead of FMLP, was used as a stimulus. Subcellular fractionation studies demonstrated that [125I]-WGA-D and [3H]-FMLP were co-internalized by PMN, and segregated to a compartment co-migrating with Golgi markers. Western blot analysis, using PMN plasma membranes, demonstrated that WGA-D bound to a single membrane glycoprotein that migrated with an apparent m.w. of 62,000. The data indicate that WGA-D, perhaps by binding to the FMLP receptor, inhibits FMLP-induced PMN chemotaxis by blocking the re-expression (or recycling) of a population of receptors required for continuous migration.  相似文献   

10.
We have used a new centrifugation assay to examine the effects of highly purified human C5a and C5a des Arg, as well as effects of N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP), on both the extent and strength of human polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) adherence to monolayers of cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells. At concentrations that were chemotactic for PMN, C5a (0.1 nM), C5a des Arg (5.0 nM), and FMLP (1.0 nM) significantly reduced the percentage of PMN that adhered to endothelial monolayers. Adherence also was reduced by C5a des Arg that was generated by incubating (37 degrees C, 30 min) fresh human serum with either zymosan or purified C5a. High concentrations of C5a (greater than 1.0 nM) and FMLP (greater than 50 nM) that diminished PMN chemotaxis significantly enhanced the percentage of PMN that adhered tightly to endothelial cells (adherent cells resisted a dislodgment force of 1200 X G). Tight adherence of PMN to endothelial cells also was increased by high concentrations of C5a that were added to human serum in which carboxypeptidase N activity was destroyed by heating (56 degrees C, 30 min), and by C5a that was generated by incubating (37 degrees C, 30 min) fresh human serum with zymosan in the presence of the carboxypeptidase N inhibitor, epsilon-aminocaproic acid. High concentrations of C5a des Arg (up to 80 nM) neither enhanced adherence of PMN to endothelial cells nor decreased PMN migration. Thus, a reciprocal relation exists between PMN migration and PMN adherence to endothelial cells in response to chemotactic factors. At concentrations that are chemotactic for human PMN, C5-derived peptides and FMLP reduce the adherence of PMN to endothelial monolayers. Only at concentrations that decrease PMN migration do C5a and FMLP augment PMN adherence.  相似文献   

11.
Murine macrophage procoagulant-inducing factor (MPIF) is a lymphokine with chemical properties distinct from a number of well-characterized cytokines. MPIF induces procoagulant activity on the surface of macrophages and thus may play a central role in the expression of cell-mediated immunity. Highly enriched MPIF-alpha and -beta, separated by virtue of their basic isoelectric point and affinity for heparin, induced local induration and fibrin deposition and cellular infiltration similar to that observed in delayed type hypersensitivity reactions, when injected intradermally. Margination with of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) along the endothelium as well as increased PMN infiltration was evident after 4 h. In contrast to other inflammatory mediators (e.g., C5a, IL-1) reactivity was sustained, with greater numbers of mononuclear cells apparent 24 h after skin testing. Changes in the dermis were evident 4 h after MPIF injection with increased numbers of cells near areas where spaces in the collagen bundles had formed. Dermal thickening was evident after 24 h and collagen fiber structure was disrupted. Extravascular fibrinogen/fibrin was most prominent 24 h after testing. LPS, which induces macrophage procoagulant activity in vitro, did not induce the histopathologic changes evident with MPIF. MPIF was chemotactic for PMN and macrophages in vitro. Chemotactic activity was heat-labile and not due to C5a. Migration was dependent on a concentration gradient, as determined by checkerboard analysis, indicating that MPIF promoted chemotaxis rather than chemokinesis. Experiments reported here suggest that MPIF is an important mediator of fibrin deposition and cellular infiltration characteristic of cell-mediated immune response.  相似文献   

12.
Thrombospondin stimulates motility of human neutrophils   总被引:10,自引:1,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):3077-3086
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) migrate to sites of inflammation or injury in response to chemoattractants released at those sites. The presence of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins at these sites may influence PMN accumulation at blood vessel walls and enhance their ability to move through tissue. Thrombospondin (TSP), a 450-kD ECM protein whose major proteolytic fragments are a COOH-terminal 140-kD fragment and an NH2-terminal heparin-binding domain (HBD), is secreted by platelets, endothelial cells, and smooth muscle cells. TSP binds specifically to PMN surface receptors and has been shown, in other cell types, to promote directed movement. TSP in solution at low concentrations (30-50 nM) "primed" PMNs for f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP)- mediated chemotaxis, increasing the response two- to fourfold. A monoclonal antibody against the HBD of TSP totally abolished this priming effect suggesting that the priming activity resides in the HBD of TSP. Purified HBD retains the priming activity of TSP thereby corroborating the antibody data. TSP alone, in solution at high concentrations (0.5-3.0 microM), stimulated chemotaxis of PMNs and required both the HBD and the 140-kD fragment of TSP. In contrast to TSP in solution, TSP bound to nitrocellulose filters in the range of 20- 70 pmol stimulated random locomotion of PMNs. The number of PMNs migrating in response to bound TSP was approximately two orders of magnitude greater than the number of cells that exhibited chemotaxis in response to soluble TSP or fMLP. Monoclonal antibody C6.7, which recognizes an epitope near the carboxyl terminus of TSP, blocked migration stimulated by bound TSP, suggesting that the activity resides in this domain. Using proteolytic fragments, we demonstrated that bound 140-kD fragment, but not HBD, promoted migration of PMNs. Therefore, TSP released at injury sites, alone or in synergy with chemotactic peptides like fMLP, could play a role in directing PMN movement.  相似文献   

13.
Measurement of chemotactic migration of human neutrophil granulocytes (PMN) induced by chemotaxins serves as a simple and reliable method for assessing the expression of chemotaxin receptors. Incubation of PMN with a certain chemotaxin leads to a diminished chemotactic migration towards this chemotaxin. This is called chemotactic deactivation. We developed a new deactivation chamber to determine chemotaxis and chemotactic deactivation of human PMN. This novel chamber is a modification of the commercially available acrylic 48-well microchemotaxis chamber consisting of an upper block with wells drilled all the way through the block and a blind-well lower block. Both blocks are separated by a polycarbonate membrane. PMN from the wells in the upper block migrate through the pores of the membrane into the wells of the lower block containing the chemoattractants. Migrated PMN on the lower side of the PC membrane were quantified after staining by measuring specific light absorbance. The chemotactic activity is quantified as a ratio of stimulated migration and random migration (chemotactic index=CI). For our novel chamber, only the upper blocks of this commercial chamber were connected like a sandwich, including a polyvinylpyrrolidone-free polycarbonate membrane with a pore size of 3 microm. The wells in the upper compartment were filled with 5 x 10(4) PMN and deactivating chemotaxin. The lower block was then filled with the chemotactic stimulus and the chamber was then incubated in humidified air with 5% CO2 atmosphere at 37 degrees C. The influence of cell concentration, incubation time, chemotactic factor concentration, pore size and alkaline treatment of polycarbonate membranes on migrational activity of PMN have been investigated. The technique was rigorously standardized in order to optimize the assay conditions. The method is relatively simple, sensitive and fast. The determination of chemotaxis and deactivation are performed in the same chamber, thus avoiding cell loss due to nonspecific adherence in other incubation tubes. The chamber can be used to characterize the chemotactic activity of chemoattractants of unknown structure via known and unknown receptors. This new chamber can be very helpful in detecting unknown chemotactic stimuli, which are not detectable by, for example, antibodies.  相似文献   

14.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients are at higher risks of bacterial infection than healthy subjects. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) are the first line of nonspecific cellular defence against these infections. We tested the hypothesis that abnormal directed migration of PMN may be one reason for the increased infection rate of RA patients. PMN migration was investigated in 68 peripheral blood samples of 15 RA patients compared with 64 samples of healthy controls in a novel whole blood in vitro membrane filter assay. The migration of PMNs from RA patients and controls was stimulated using the bacterial chemoattractant N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP). Unstimulated PMN migration of RA patients was increased compared with healthy controls as measured by the following parameters: (a) absolute number of migrant PMNs (1954+/-87 vs. 1238 +/-58 PMN/mm2), (b) percentage of PMNs migrated into the filter (total migration index, TMI) (28.6+/-0.9 vs. 24.0+/-0.8%), (c) the distance half the migrating PMNs had covered (distribution characteristic, DC) (22.6+/-1.1 vs. 16.1+/-0.6 mm) and (d) the product of TMI and DC (neutrophil migratory activity, NMA) (669.0+/-45.0 vs. 389.0+/-18.9). fMLP stimulated PMNs of RA patients showed defective migration compared to unstimulated samples as shown by (a) a reduced number of migrant PMNs (1799+/-93 PMN/mm2), (b) lower TMI (26.1+/-0.9%), (c) unremarkable altered distribution characteristic (22.9+/-0.8 mm) and (d) significant reduced migratory activity (600.0+/-30.0). Our data suggest that the high incidence of infections in RA patients may partly be caused by defective migratory activity of PMNs to bacterial chemoattractants as demonstrated by fMLP.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of taxol on human neutrophils   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Taxol, a plant alkaloid, promotes and stabilizes microtubule assembly in cells and cellfree systems. In the present study, the effects of taxol on various functional, morphologic, and biochemical phenomena in human peripheral blood PMN (Hypaque-Ficoll) were examined. Taxol (10(-7) M) inhibited PMN chemotaxis stimulated by N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (f-met-leu-phe) or endotoxin-activated serum by more than 60%. The inhibition was not readily reversed by washing, and taxol itself was not a chemoattractant, nor is it a secretagogue. Spontaneous nondirected migration, cell spreading on a glass surface, and orientation of cell organelles in response to a chemoattractant gradient were also inhibited by taxol. Taxol (10(-5) M) decreased killing of Staphylococcus aureus, but did not alter phagocytosis of heat-killed Candida or hexose monophosphate shunt activity in resting or stimulated PMN. Ultrastructural studies showed that PMN incubated in f-met-leu-phe, taxol, or both had increased (p less than 0.001) numbers of centrosome-associated microtubules, and the microtubules of cells incubated in taxol with or without f-met-leu-phe were organized into bundles. Taxol (10(-5) M) markedly inhibited post-translational tyrosinolation of alpha-chains of tubulin in both resting and f-met-leu-phe-stimulated PMN. The data indicate that taxol inhibits PMN locomotion and bacterial killing, supporting a role for microtubules in these processes. The ultrastructural and biochemical data also support the view that taxol mediates its effects on PMN by its effect on microtubules.  相似文献   

16.
The host response to Salmonella typhimurium involves movement of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) across the epithelium and into the intestinal lumen. Following their arrival in the lumen, the PMN attempt to combat bacterial infection by activating antimicrobial defenses such as granule release, oxidative burst, phagocytosis, and cell signaling. We sought to examine PMN-S. typhimurium interaction following PMN arrival in the lumenal compartment. Here, for the first time, we demonstrate that PMN that have transmigrated across model intestinal epithelia have an enhanced ability to kill S. typhimurium. Our data provide evidence to indicate that the extracellular release of the primary and secondary granules of PMN, myeloperoxidase and lactoferrin, respectively, is correlated with enhanced bacterial killing. Furthermore, epithelial cells, during PMN transmigration, release the cytokine IL-6. IL-6 is known to increase intracellular stores of Ca(2+), and we have determined that this epithelial released cytokine is not only responsible for priming the PMN to release their granules, but also stimulating the PMN to kill S. typhimurium. These results substantiate the pathway in which PMN transmigration activates the epithelial release of IL-6, which in turn increases intracellular Ca(2+) storage. Our results, herein, extend this pathway to include an enhanced PMN granule release and an enhanced killing of S. typhimurium.  相似文献   

17.
To study the role of L-selectin in neutrophil (PMN) margination and sequestration in the pulmonary microcirculation, maximally active concentrations of C5a (900 pmol/g) and N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP; 0.34 pmol/g) were injected into the jugular vein of wild-type or L-selectin-deficient C57BL/6 mice. In wild-type mice administered C5a or fMLP, 92 +/- 1% and 34 +/- 9%, respectively, of peripheral blood PMN were trapped mostly in the pulmonary circulation as determined by immunohistochemistry and myeloperoxidase activity. In wild-type mice treated with F(ab')(2) fragments of the L-selectin monoclonal antibody MEL-14 or in L-selectin-deficient mice, C5a-induced neutropenia was not significantly reduced, but the decrease in peripheral PMN in response to fMLP was completely abolished, indicating that L-selectin is necessary for fMLP- but not C5a-induced pulmonary margination. Immunostained lung sections of fMLP- or C5a-treated mice showed sequestered neutrophils in alveolar capillaries with no evidence of neutrophil aggregates. We conclude that chemoattractant-induced PMN margination in the pulmonary circulation can occur by two separate mechanisms, one of which requires L-selectin.  相似文献   

18.
Recent studies have demonstrated that CD47 plays an important role in regulating human neutrophil (PMN) chemotaxis. Two ligands for CD47, thrombospondin and SIRPalpha, have been described. However, it is not known if SIRP-CD47 interactions play a role in regulating PMN migration. In this study, we show that SIRPalpha1 directly binds to the immunoglobulin variable domain loop of purified human CD47 and that such SIRP-CD47 interactions regulate PMN transmigration. Specifically, PMN migration across both human epithelial monolayers and collagen-coated filters was partially inhibited by anti-SIRP monoclonal antibodies. Similar kinetics of inhibition were observed for PMN transmigration in the presence of soluble, recombinant CD47 consisting of the SIRP-binding loop. In contrast, anti-CD47 monoclonal antibodies inhibited PMN transmigration by markedly different kinetics. Results of signal transduction experiments suggested differential regulation of PMN migration by SIRP versus CD47 by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and tyrosine kinases, respectively. Immunoprecipitation followed by Western blotting after SDS-PAGE under nonreducing conditions suggested that several SIRP protein species may be present in PMN. Stimulation of PMN with fMLP resulted in increased surface expression of these SIRP proteins, consistent with the existence of intracellular pools. Taken together, these results demonstrate that PMN migration is regulated by CD47 through SIRPalpha-dependent and SIRPalpha-independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the migration of oil-induced, guinea pig peritoneal macrophages in three-dimensional fibrin matrices, with particular attention to variables which modified fibrin gel structure and/or its adhesive properties for cells. The variables studied were fibrin concentration, gel cross-linking, and fibronectin and glycosaminoglycan content. Macrophage migration was an inverse linear function of fibrinogen concentration. Little or no fibrinolysis accompanied macrophage migration; rather, macrophages migrated through fibrin gels by an active process associated with marked distortions of cell shape and specialized plasma membrane contacts with fibrin strands. Fibrin matrices prepared from fibrinogen that had been depleted of clotting factor XIII and/or fibronectin provided a superior matrix for macrophage migration. Both the number of migrating cells and distance of migration were reduced when the gel matrix included fibronectin and was cross-linked by factor XIII. A hexapeptide containing the fibronectin cell-binding RGDS sequence reversed this migration inhibition, suggesting that fibronectin immobilized by cross-linking to fibrin may have bound macrophages and restricted cell migration. Hyaluronic acid, heparin, and heparan sulfate inhibited macrophage migration in cross-linked fibrin-fibronectin gels over a range of concentrations. These data are relevant to an understanding of macrophage migration in vivo where cross-linked fibrin-fibronectin gels containing variable amounts of glycosaminoglycans are deposited in tissues in immunologic reactions and in many other types of pathology.  相似文献   

20.
We examined the production of PAF and LTB4 by PMN in response to NAP1/IL-8 alone, or after preincubation with GM-CSF, which has been shown to enhance PMN responsiveness and to prime PMN for production of those bioactive lipids. NAP-1/IL-8 does not induce the synthesis of PAF and LTB4 from endogenous phospholipid precursors, even after preincubation with GM-CSF. In addition and again in contrast to fMLP and C5a, NAP-1/IL-8 fails to induce an enhanced oxidative burst in GM-CSF primed PMN. Exogenously added PAF or LTB4 can mimic the priming effect of GM-CSF for an enhanced oxidative burst in response to all examined chemotactic peptides including NAP1/IL-8. Our data reveal a possible autocrine role of PAF and LTB4 in the enhanced responsiveness of GM-CSF primed PMN towards fMLP or C5a, but not NAP-1/IL-8.  相似文献   

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