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1.
The heparin-binding group II subfamily of secretory phospholipase A(2)s (sPLA(2)s), such as sPLA(2)-IIA and -IID, augments stimulus-induced arachidonic acid (AA) release through the cellular heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG)-dependent pathway when transfected into HEK293 cells. Here we show that the closest homolog, sPLA(2)-IIE, also promotes stimulus-induced AA release and prostaglandin (PG) production similar to those elicited by HSPG-dependent sPLA(2)s. Confocal laser microscopic analysis demonstrates the location of sPLA(2)-IIE in cytoplasmic punctate compartments. sPLA(2)-IIE also enhances leukotriene (LT) production and granule exocytosis by RBL-2H3 mastocytoma cells. Expression of sPLA(2)-IIE was highly upregulated in mice injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and in mice with experimental atopic dermatitis. These observations suggest that this enzyme plays a role in the inflammatory process, as proposed for other group II subfamily sPLA(2)s.  相似文献   

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3.
Hydrolysis of surfactant phospholipids by secreted phospholipases A(2) (sPLA(2)) contributes to surfactant dysfunction in acute respiratory distress syndrome. The present study demonstrates that sPLA(2)-IIA, sPLA(2)-V, and sPLA(2)-X efficiently hydrolyze surfactant phospholipids in vitro. In contrast, sPLA(2)-IIC, -IID, -IIE, and -IIF have no effect. Since purified surfactant protein A (SP-A) has been shown to inhibit sPLA(2)-IIA activity, we investigated the in vitro effect of SP-A on the other active sPLA(2) and the consequences of sPLA(2)-IIA inhibition by SP-A on surfactant phospholipid hydrolysis. SP-A inhibits sPLA(2)-X activity, but fails to interfere with that of sPLA(2)-V. Moreover, in vitro inhibition of sPLA(2)-IIA-induces surfactant phospholipid hydrolysis correlates with the concentration of SP-A in surfactant. Intratracheal administration of sPLA(2)-IIA to mice causes hydrolysis of surfactant phosphatidylglycerol. Interestingly, such hydrolysis is significantly higher for SP-A gene-targeted mice, showing the in vivo inhibitory effect of SP-A on sPLA(2)-IIA activity. Administration of sPLA(2)-IIA also induces respiratory distress, which is more pronounced in SP-A gene-targeted mice than in wild-type mice. We conclude that SP-A inhibits sPLA(2) activity, which may play a protective role by maintaining surfactant integrity during lung injury.  相似文献   

4.
Although the expression of the prototypic secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)), group IIA (sPLA(2)-IIA), is known to be up-regulated during inflammation, it remains uncertain if other sPLA(2) enzymes display similar or distinct profiles of induction under pathological conditions. In this study, we investigated the expression of several sPLA(2)s in rodent inflammation models. In lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated mice, the expression of sPLA(2)-V, and to a lesser extent that of sPLA(2)-IID, -IIE, and -IIF, were increased, whereas that of sPLA(2)-X was rather constant, in distinct tissues. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced mouse ear edema, in which the expression of sPLA(2)-IID, -IIF and -V was increased, was significantly reduced by YM-26734, a competitive sPLA(2)-IIA inhibitor that turned out to inhibit sPLA(2)-IID, -IIE, -V and -X as well. In contrast, sPLA(2)-IIA was dominant in carageenin-induced pleurisy in rats, where the accumulation of exudate fluids and leukocytes was significantly ameliorated by YM-26734. These results indicate that distinct sPLA(2)s can participate in inflammatory diseases according to tissues, animal species, and types of inflammation.  相似文献   

5.
We herein demonstrate that mast cells express all known members of the group II subfamily of secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) isozymes, and those having heparin affinity markedly enhance the exocytotic response. Rat mastocytoma RBL-2H3 cells transfected with heparin-binding (sPLA2-IIA, -V, and -IID), but not heparin-nonbinding (sPLA2-IIC), enzymes released more granule-associated markers (beta-hexosaminidase and histamine) than mock- or cytosolic PLA2alpha (cPLA2alpha)-transfected cells after stimulation with IgE and Ag. Site-directed mutagenesis of sPLA2-IIA and -V revealed that both the catalytic and heparin-binding domains are essential for this function. Confocal laser and electron microscopic analyses revealed that sPLA2-IIA, which was stored in secretory granules in unstimulated cells, accumulated on the membranous sites where fusion between the plasma membrane and granule membranes occurred in activated cells. These results suggest that the heparin-binding sPLA2s bind to the perigranular membranes through their heparin-binding domain, and lysophospholipids produced in situ by their enzymatic action may facilitate the ongoing membrane fusion. In contrast to the redundant role of sPLA2-IIA, -IID, and -V in the regulation of degranulation, only sPLA2-V had the ability to markedly augment IgE/Ag-stimulated immediate PGD2 production, which reached a level comparable to that elicited by cPLA2alpha. The latter observation reveals an unexplored functional segregation among the three related isozymes expressed in the same cell population.  相似文献   

6.
The secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) family in mammals contains more than 10 enzymes. In this study, we examined by immunohistochemistry the localization of six sPLA2s (IIA, IID, IIE, IIF, V and X) in human heart, kidney, liver and stomach. In normal hearts, sPLA2-IIA was detected in coronary vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) and sPLA2-V in cardiomyocytes beneath the endocardium. In infarcted hearts, expression of these two enzymes was markedly increased in damaged cardiomyocytes, and expression of sPLA2-IID and-IIE, which was undetectable in normal hearts, was elevated in damaged cardiomyocytes and VSMC, respectively. In infarcted kidneys, sPLA2-IIA and-V were markedly induced in the uriniferous tubular epithelium. In livers affected by viral hepatitis, sPLA2-IIA and-V were expressed in hepatocytes with fatty degeneration. In the gastric glands exhibiting intestinal metaplasia, sPLA2-IIA was localized in the glandular base, sPLA2-IID and-V in the glandular body epithelium, sPLA2-IIE and-IIF in goblet cells in the foveolar epithelium, and sPLA2-X in both glandular body epithelial cells and foveolar epithelial goblet cells. In the gastric submucosal tissues, sPLA2-IIA and-IIE were located in VSMC and sPLA2-V was in the interstitial fibroblasts. In addition, sPLA2-IIA,-IIE,-IIF and-X were highly expressed in gastric signet ring cell carcinoma. Thus, individual sPLA2s exhibit unique cellular localizations in each tissue, suggesting their distinct roles in pathophysiology.  相似文献   

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Group IID secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)-IID), a heparin-binding sPLA(2) that is closely related to sPLA(2)-IIA, augments stimulus-induced cellular arachidonate release in a manner similar to sPLA(2)-IIA. Here we identified the residues of sPLA(2)-IID that are responsible for heparanoid binding, are and therefore essential for cellular function. Mutating four cationic residues in the C-terminal portion of sPLA(2)-IID resulted in abolition of its ability to associate with cell surface heparan sulfate and to enhance stimulus-induced delayed arachidonate release, cyclooxygenase-2 induction, and prostaglandin generation in 293 cell transfectants. As compared with several other group II subfamily sPLA(2)s, which were equally active on A23187- and IL-1-primed cellular membranes, sPLA(2)-IID showed apparent preference for A23187-primed membranes. Several human colon carcinoma cell lines expressed sPLA(2)-IID and sPLA(2)-X constitutively, the former of which was negatively regulated by IL-1. sPLA(2)-IID, but not other sPLA(2) isozymes, was expressed in human cord blood-derived mast cells. The expression of sPLA(2)-IID was significantly altered in several tissues of mice with experimental inflammation. These results indicate that sPLA(2)-IID may be involved in inflammation in cell- and tissue-specific manners under particular conditions.  相似文献   

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Group X secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)-X) possesses several structural features characteristic of both group IB and IIA sPLA(2)s (sPLA(2)-IB and -IIA) and is postulated to be involved in inflammatory responses owing to its restricted expression in the spleen and thymus. Here, we report the purification of human recombinant COOH-terminal His-tagged sPLA(2)-X, the preparation of its antibody, and the purification of native sPLA(2)-X. The affinity-purified sPLA(2)-X protein migrated as various molecular species of 13-18 kDa on SDS-polyacrylamide gels, and N-glycosidase F treatment caused shifts to the 13- and 14-kDa bands. NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequencing analysis revealed that the 13-kDa form is a putative mature sPLA(2)-X and the 14-kDa protein possesses a propeptide of 11 amino acid residues attached at the NH(2) termini of the mature protein. Separation with reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography revealed that N-linked carbohydrates are not required for the enzymatic activity and pro-sPLA(2)-X has a relatively weak potency compared with the mature protein. The mature sPLA(2)-X induced the release of arachidonic acid from phosphatidylcholine more efficiently than other human sPLA(2) groups (IB, IIA, IID, and V) and elicited a prompt and marked release of arachidonic acid from human monocytic THP-1 cells compared with sPLA(2)-IB and -IIA with concomitant production of prostaglandin E(2). A prominent release of arachidonic acid was also observed in sPLA(2)-X-treated human U937 and HL60 cells. Immunohistochemical analysis of human lung preparations revealed its expression in alveolar epithelial cells. These results indicate that human sPLA(2)-X is a unique N-glycosylated sPLA(2) that releases arachidonic acid from human myeloid leukemia cells more efficiently than sPLA(2)-IB and -IIA.  相似文献   

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12.
Types IIA and V secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) are structurally related to each other and their genes are tightly linked to the same chromosome locus. An emerging body of evidence suggests that sPLA2-IIA plays an augmentative role in long-term prostaglandin (PG) generation in cells activated by proinflammatory stimuli; however, the mechanism underlying the functional regulation of sPLA2-V remains largely unknown. Here we show that sPLA2-V is more widely expressed than sPLA2-IIA in the mouse, in which its expression is elevated by proinflammatory stimuli such as lipopolysaccharide. In contrast, proinflammatory stimuli induced sPLA2-IIA in marked preference to sPLA2-V in the rat. Cotransfection of sPLA2-V with cyclooxygenase (COX)-2, but not with COX-1, into human embryonic kidney 293 cells dramatically increased the interleukin-1-dependent PGE2 generation occurring over a 24 h of culture period. Rat mastocytoma RBL-2H3 cells overexpressing sPLA2-V exhibited increased IgE-dependent PGD2 generation and accelerated beta-hexosaminidase exocytosis. These results suggest that sPLA2-V acts as a regulator of inflammation-associated cellular responses. This possible compensation of sPLA2-V for sPLA2-IIA in many, if not all, tissues may also explain why some mouse strains with natural disruption of the sPLA2-IIA gene exhibit few abnormalities during their life-spans.  相似文献   

13.
Although the expression of the prototypic secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2), group IIA (sPLA2-IIA), is known to be up-regulated during inflammation, it remains uncertain if other sPLA2 enzymes display similar or distinct profiles of induction under pathological conditions. In this study, we investigated the expression of several sPLA2s in rodent inflammation models. In lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated mice, the expression of sPLA2-V, and to a lesser extent that of sPLA2-IID, -IIE, and -IIF, were increased, whereas that of sPLA2-X was rather constant, in distinct tissues. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced mouse ear edema, in which the expression of sPLA2-IID, -IIF and -V was increased, was significantly reduced by YM-26734, a competitive sPLA2-IIA inhibitor that turned out to inhibit sPLA2-IID, -IIE, -V and -X as well. In contrast, sPLA2-IIA was dominant in carageenin-induced pleurisy in rats, where the accumulation of exudate fluids and leukocytes was significantly ameliorated by YM-26734. These results indicate that distinct sPLA2s can participate in inflammatory diseases according to tissues, animal species, and types of inflammation.  相似文献   

14.
An emerging body of evidence suggests that type IIA secretory phospholipase A(2) (sPLA(2)-IIA) participates in the amplification of the stimulus-induced cyclooxygenase (COX)-2-dependent delayed prostaglandin (PG)-biosynthetic response in several cell types. However, the biological importance of the ability of sPLA(2)-IIA to bind to heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) on cell surfaces has remained controversial. Here we show that glypican, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored HSPG, acts as a physical and functional adaptor for sPLA(2)-IIA. sPLA(2)-IIA-dependent PGE(2) generation by interleukin-1-stimulated cells was markedly attenuated by treatment of the cells with heparin, heparinase or GPI-specific phospholipase C, which solubilized the cell surface-associated sPLA(2)-IIA. Overexpression of glypican-1 increased the association of sPLA(2)-IIA with the cell membrane, and glypican-1 was coimmunoprecipitated by the antibody against sPLA(2)-IIA. Glypican-1 overexpression led to marked augmentation of sPLA(2)-IIA-mediated arachidonic acid release, PGE(2) generation, and COX-2 induction in interleukin-1-stimulated cells, particularly when the sPLA(2)-IIA expression level was suboptimal. Immunofluorescent microscopic analyses of cytokine-stimulated cells revealed that sPLA(2)-IIA was present in the caveolae, a microdomain in which GPI-anchored proteins reside, and also appeared in the perinuclear area in proximity to COX-2. We therefore propose that a GPI-anchored HSPG glypican facilitates the trafficking of sPLA(2)-IIA into particular subcellular compartments, and arachidonic acid thus released from the compartments may link efficiently to the downstream COX-2-mediated PG biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Among the 11 members of the secreted phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) family, group IID, IIE, IIF and III sPLA2s (sPLA2-IID, -IIE, -IIF and -III, respectively) are “new” isoforms in the history of sPLA2 research. Relative to the better characterized sPLA2s (sPLA2-IB, -IIA, -V and -X), the enzymatic properties, distributions, and functions of these “new” sPLA2s have remained obscure until recently. Our current studies using knockout and transgenic mice for a nearly full set of sPLA2s, in combination with comprehensive lipidomics, have revealed unique and distinct roles of these “new” sPLA2s in specific biological events. Thus, sPLA2-IID is involved in immune suppression, sPLA2-IIE in metabolic regulation and hair follicle homeostasis, sPLA2-IIF in epidermal hyperplasia, and sPLA2-III in male reproduction, anaphylaxis, colonic diseases, and possibly atherosclerosis. In this article, we overview current understanding of the properties and functions of these sPLA2s and their underlying lipid pathways in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Inflammation is an integral feature of atherosclerosis, in which inflammatory processes contribute to the initiation, progression and rupture of lipid-rich atherosclerotic plaques. Recent studies have suggested the involvement of the proinflammatory secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2)-IIA in the development of atherosclerosis. This enzyme has been proposed to hydrolyze phosphatidylcholine (PC) in lipoproteins to liberate lyso-PC and free fatty acids in the arterial wall, thereby facilitating the accumulation of bioactive lipids and modified lipoproteins in atherosclerotic foci. However, the recent discovery of several novel sPLA2 isozymes has raised the question of which types of sPLA2 truly contribute to the atherosclerotic process. RECENT FINDINGS: Amongst the 10 mammalian sPLA2 isozymes, sPLA2-X, -V, -IIF and -III exhibit much more potent PC-hydrolyzing activity than do the others, and can release free fatty acids and lysophospholipids from the PC-rich outer leaflet of the cellular plasma membrane. In particular, sPLA2-X and sPLA2-V hydrolyze PC in lipoproteins far more efficiently than does sPLA2-IIA. Moreover, sPLA2-X promotes foam cell formation in vitro and is expressed in the atherosclerotic arterial walls of apolipoprotein E deficient mice in vivo. SUMMARY: PC-hydrolyzing sPLA2 isozymes, particularly sPLA2-V and sPLA2-X, are attractive candidates for proatherosclerotic factors that may act in place of sPLA2-IIA. However, their expression in human atherosclerotic lesions requires confirmation by specific methods that can distinguish between the different sPLA2 isozymes.  相似文献   

17.
T Kambe  M Murakami  I Kudo 《FEBS letters》1999,453(1-2):81-84
By analyzing human embryonic kidney 293 cell transfectants stably overexpressing various types of phospholipase A2 (PLA2), we have shown that polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) preferentially activate type IIA secretory PLA2 (sPLA2-IIA)-mediated arachidonic acid (AA) release from interleukin-1 (IL-1)-stimulated cells. When 293 cells prelabeled with 13H]AA were incubated with exogenous PUFAs in the presence of IL-1 and serum, there was a significant increase in [3H]AA release (in the order AA > linoleic acid > oleic acid), which was augmented markedly by sPLA2-IIA and modestly by type IV cytosolic PLA2 (cPLA2), but only minimally by type VI Ca2(+)-independent PLA2, overexpression. Transfection of cPLA2 into sPLA2-IIA-expressing cells produced a synergistic increase in IL-1-dependent [3H]AA release and subsequent prostaglandin production. Our results support the proposal that prior production of AA by cPLA2 in cytokine-stimulated cells destabilizes the cellular membranes, thereby rendering them more susceptible to subsequent hydrolysis by sPLA2-IIA.  相似文献   

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Although it has been proposed that arachidonate release by several secretory phospholipase A2 (sPLA2) isozymes is modulated by cytosolic PLA2 (cPLA2), the cellular component(s) that intermediates between these two signaling PLA2s remains unknown. Here we provide evidence that 12- or 15-lipoxygenase (12/15-LOX), which lies downstream of cPLA2, plays a pivotal role in cytokine-induced gene expression and function of sPLA2-IIA. The sPLA2-IIA expression and associated PGE2 generation induced by cytokines in rat fibroblastic 3Y1 cells were markedly attenuated by antioxidants that possess 12/15-LOX inhibitory activity. 3Y1 cells expressed 12/15-LOX endogenously, and forcible overexpression of 12/15-LOX in these cells greatly enhanced cytokine-induced expression of sPLA2-IIA, with a concomitant increase in delayed PG generation. Moreover, studies using 293 cells stably transfected with sPLA2-IIA revealed that stimulus-dependent hydrolysis of membrane phospholipids by sPLA2-IIA was enhanced by overexpression of 12/15-LOX. These results indicate that the product(s) generated by the cPLA2-12/15-LOX pathway following cell activation may play two roles: enhancement of sPLA2-IIA gene expression and membrane sensitization that leads to accelerated sPLA2-IIA-mediated hydrolysis.  相似文献   

20.
Ueno N  Murakami M  Kudo I 《FEBS letters》2000,475(3):242-246
We performed reconstitution analyses of functional interaction between phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)) and phospholipase D (PLD) enzymes. Cotransfection of HEK293 cells with cytosolic (cPLA(2)) or type IIA secretory (sPLA(2)-IIA) PLA(2) and PLD(2), but not PLD(1), led to marked augmentation of stimulus-induced arachidonate release. Interleukin-1-stimulated arachidonate release was accompanied by prostaglandin E(2) production via cyclooxygenase-2, the expression of which was augmented by PLD(2). Conversely, activation of PLD(2), not PLD(1), was facilitated by cPLA(2) or sPLA(2)-IIA. Thus, our results revealed functional crosstalk between signaling PLA(2)s and PLD(2) in the regulation of various cellular responses in which these enzymes have been implicated.  相似文献   

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