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1.
The present study was designed to characterize the production of chemoattractants by human melanoma lines with high (M4Be, M3Da, NTerDa) or low tumorigenic (Doc8, M1Do) potential when heterotransplanted in nude mice. Supernatants from the Doc8 and M1Do cell lines were strongly chemotactic in vitro for mononuclear phagocytes. Chemotactic activity was destroyed by proteolytic enzymes, and upon gel filtration on Sephadex G75, it eluted in the cytochrome c region corresponding to an apparent m.w. of 12,000. Upon chromatofocusing, the Sephadex-separated tumor-derived chemotactic factor (TDCF) showed an isoelectric point of 5.5 to 6. Cell lines with high tumorigenic potential contained low or no detectable chemotactic activity. When culture supernatants of cell lines with modest (M3Da) or no (M4Be) chemotactic activity were exposed to immobilized monoclonal antibodies directed against the retroviral transmembrane protein P15E, appreciable chemotactic activity was detectable (M4Be) or preexisting levels increased (M3Da). The material eluted from Sepharose-bound anti-P15E antibodies inhibited the migration of monocytes in response to chemoattractants. These findings demonstrate the coexistence in some human melanoma cell line supernatants of factors (TDCF and P15E-related inhibitor) with opposite influence on monocyte chemotaxis. That tumor cell products play a pivotal role in regulating the extravasation of monocytes into neoplastic tissues is suggested by the close correlation observed between macrophage levels in melanomas grown in nude mice and levels of chemotactic activity detectable in culture supernatants.  相似文献   

2.
Cyclic ADP ribose (cADPR) is a calcium-mobilizing metabolite that regulates intracellular calcium release and extracellular calcium influx. Although the role of cADPR in modulating calcium mobilization has been extensively examined, its potential role in regulating immunologic responses is less well understood. We previously reported that cADPR, produced by the ADP-ribosyl cyclase, CD38, controls calcium influx and chemotaxis of murine neutrophils responding to fMLF, a peptide agonist for two chemoattractant receptor subtypes, formyl peptide receptor and formyl peptide receptor-like 1. In this study, we examine whether cADPR is required for chemotaxis of human monocytes and neutrophils to a diverse array of chemoattractants. We found that a cADPR antagonist and a CD38 substrate analogue inhibited the chemotaxis of human phagocytic cells to a number of formyl peptide receptor-like 1-specific ligands but had no effect on the chemotactic response of these cells to ligands selective for formyl peptide receptor. In addition, we show that the cADPR antagonist blocks the chemotaxis of human monocytes to CXCR4, CCR1, and CCR5 ligands. In all cases, we found that cADPR modulates intracellular free calcium levels in cells activated by chemokines that induce extracellular calcium influx in the apparent absence of significant intracellular calcium release. Thus, cADPR regulates calcium signaling of a discrete subset of chemoattractant receptors expressed by human leukocytes. Since many of the chemoattractant receptors regulated by cADPR bind to ligands that are associated with clinical pathology, cADPR and CD38 represent novel drug targets with potential application in chronic inflammatory and neurodegenerative disease.  相似文献   

3.
Neutrophils must follow both endogenous and bacterial chemoattractant signals out of the vasculature and through the interstitium to arrive at a site of infection. By necessity, in the setting of multiple chemoattractants, the neutrophils must prioritize, favoring end target chemoattractants (e.g., fMLP and C5a) emanating from the site of infection over intermediary endogenous chemoattractants (e.g., IL-8 and LTB4) encountered en route to sites of infection. In this study, we propose a hierarchical model of two signaling pathways mediating the decision-making process of the neutrophils, which allows end target molecules to dominate over intermediary chemoattractants. In an under agarose assay, neutrophils predominantly migrated toward end target chemoattractants via p38 MAPK, whereas intermediary chemoattractant-induced migration was phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt dependent. When faced with competing gradients of end target and intermediary chemoattractants, Akt activation was significantly reduced within neutrophils, and the cells migrated preferentially toward end target chemoattractants even at 1/1,000th that of intermediary chemoattractants. End target molecules did not require chemotactic properties, since the p38 MAPK activator, LPS, also inhibited Akt and prevented migration to intermediary chemoattractants. p38 MAPK inhibitors not only reversed this hierarchy, such that neutrophils migrated preferentially toward intermediary chemoattractants, but also allowed neutrophils to be drawn out of a local end target chemoattractant environment and toward intermediary chemoattractants unexpectedly in an exaggerated (two- to fivefold) fashion. This was entirely related to significantly increased magnitude and duration of Akt activation. Finally, end target chemoattractant responses were predominantly Mac-1 dependent, whereas nondominant chemoattractants used primarily LFA-1. These data provide support for a two pathway signaling model wherein the end target chemoattractants activate p38 MAPK, which inhibits intermediary chemoattractant-induced PI3K/Akt pathway, establishing an intracellular signaling hierarchy.  相似文献   

4.
Neutrophil recruitment to inflammation sites purportedly depends on sequential waves of chemoattractants. Current models propose that leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)), a secondary chemoattractant secreted by neutrophils in response to primary chemoattractants such as formyl peptides, is important in initiating the inflammation process. In this study we demonstrate that LTB(4) plays a central role in neutrophil activation and migration to formyl peptides. We show that LTB(4) production dramatically amplifies formyl peptide-mediated neutrophil polarization and chemotaxis by regulating specific signaling pathways acting upstream of actin polymerization and MyoII phosphorylation. Importantly, by analyzing the migration of neutrophils isolated from wild-type mice and mice lacking the formyl peptide receptor 1, we demonstrate that LTB(4) acts as a signal to relay information from cell to cell over long distances. Together, our findings imply that LTB(4) is a signal-relay molecule that exquisitely regulates neutrophil chemotaxis to formyl peptides, which are produced at the core of inflammation sites.  相似文献   

5.
The biosynthesis of proteins with N-terminal formylated methionine residues and subsequent protein deformylation are unique and invariant bacterial processes. They are exploited by the capacity of the human innate immune system to sense formylated peptides (FPs) and targeted by the deformylation-blocking antibiotic actinonin. We show that human polymorphonuclear leukocytes respond via the formyl peptide receptor (FPR) with increased calcium ion fluxes, chemotactic migration, IL-8 release, and CD11b upregulation to the human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus upon actinonin treatment. These data underscore the crucial role of bacterial FPs in innate immunity and indicate that deformylase inhibition may have considerable proinflammatory consequences.  相似文献   

6.
Two sets of seemingly contradictory evidence have been reported concerning the effects of tumor cell products on the regulation of monocyte migration in vitro and presumably the extravasation of macrophages into tumors in vivo. The present study was designed to explore the relationship between chemotactic and anti-chemotactic products related to tumor cells: a tumor-derived chemotactic factor (TDCF) and retroviral P15E-related inhibitor(s) of chemotaxis. Culture supernatants of the human 8387 sarcoma and SW626 ovarian carcinoma were depleted of P15E-related antigens with immobilized anti-P15E monoclonal antibodies. This treatment produced a significant and consistent increase of the polarizing and chemotactic activity in the tumor cell supernatants. The material eluted from Sepharose-bound anti-P15E antibodies was devoid of chemotactic and polarizing activity and suppressed the polarization and migration of monocytes in response to chemoattractants. These results demonstrate the coexistence in culture supernatants of two human tumor cell lines of factors with opposite influences on monocyte chemotaxis. The data suggest that the entry of monocytes into neoplastic tissue may be regulated by the interplay of chemotactic and anti-chemotactic principals produced by tumor cells.  相似文献   

7.
We have purified to homogeneity two distinct 10-kDa proteins with potent chemotactic activity for neutrophils from porcine alveolar macrophages incubated for 24 h with Escherichia coli endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide (LPS), 10 micrograms/ml). Neutrophil chemotactic activity in alveolar macrophage supernatants was concentrated by adsorption to SP-Sephadex, and purified by cation exchange and reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography. The first peptide, alveolar macrophage chemotactic factor (AMCF)-I, had chemotactic activity for both porcine and human neutrophils. The chemotactic activity for porcine neutrophils was detectable at 3 x 10(-10) M, peaked at 3 x 10(-8) M, and was comparable to that of zymosan-activated porcine serum. Segmental instillation of AMCF-I into porcine lungs caused marked neutrophil accumulation at 4 h in both bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and in lung tissue. The second peptide, AMCF-II, was active at 1.4 x 10(-9) M for porcine neutrophils, but it was less active for human polymorphonuclear neutrophils than was AMCF-I. Oligonucleotide probes to regions of the N-terminal sequences of AMCF-I and AMCF-II hybridized to mRNA recovered from LPS-stimulated alveolar macrophages. The N-terminal sequences and amino acid compositions indicate that AMCF-I and AMCF-II are distinct proteins, but that both have homologies with a family of peptide chemoattractants produced by human blood monocytes and platelets. Thus, alveolar macrophages stimulated with LPS produce two distinct 10-kDa cytokines with potent chemotactic activity for neutrophils. This indicates that there are two different peptide pathways by which alveolar macrophages can recruit neutrophils into the lung.  相似文献   

8.
LPS stimulated human blood mononuclear leukocytes to produce a chemotactic factor for human neutrophils. The effect of LPS was dose-dependent; 10 micrograms/ml was optimal for production of chemotactic factor. Chemotactic activity was detected 3 hr after LPS stimulation, and reached its peak at 12 hr. No activity was detected in culture supernatants of unstimulated cells, provided LPS-free media were selected. Isoelectric point of the factor, determined by chromatofocusing, was approximately 8 to 8.5. Molecular weight was approximately 10 kilodaltons by Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration or by HPLC gel filtration on TSK-2000 and -3000 columns in succession. The gel filtration fractions were also assayed for IL 1 activity. The elution position of IL 1 activity corresponded to a m.w. of 18. There was no chemotactic activity in the IL 1 activity peak. Furthermore, highly purified natural Il 1 alpha and -beta and recombinant Il 1 alpha and -beta did not exhibit chemotactic activity for neutrophils in our assay. Among mononuclear leukocytes, the monocyte was the principal producer of neutrophil chemotactic factor. These results suggest that a chemotactic factor for neutrophils, different from IL 1, is produced by LPS-stimulated blood monocytes.  相似文献   

9.
Leukocyte activation by chemoattractants provides an important model to study the biochemical mechanisms of stimulus-response coupling in these cells. Well-defined chemotactic factors induce readily quantifiable responses in phagocytic leukocytes. These include directed migration and the production and release of toxic substances including oxygen radicals and lysosomal enzymes. The development of radiolabeled synthetic oligopeptides with potent chemotactic activity allowed the demonstration of chemoattractant receptors on polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) as well as macrophages. In membrane preparations from these cells, these receptors exist in high- and low-affinity states which are regulated by guanosine di- and triphosphates. This suggested that chemoattractant receptors interact with guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (N or G proteins). Although chemoattractants elicit a rapid but transient increase in intracellular cAMP levels, they neither stimulate nor inhibit membrane-bound adenylate cyclase, suggesting a novel role for N proteins in certain receptor-transduction mechanisms. Stimulation of phagocytes by chemoattractants is also associated with a rapid increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations ([ Ca2+]i) which appears to result from the production of inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) as a consequence of the diesteric cleavage of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). Treatment of phagocytes with pertussis toxin (PT), which ADP-ribosylates and thereby inactivates certain N proteins, abolishes the cells' responsiveness to chemoattractants. More direct evidence for a role of a PT-sensitive N protein in leukocyte activation was provided by the demonstration that chemoattractants stimulate the hydrolysis of PIP2 in PMN membranes only in the presence of GTP. This receptor-mediated hydrolysis of PIP2 is not observed in plasma membranes prepared from PT-treated PMNs. Therefore, these studies suggest that occupancy of chemoattractant receptors activates a PT-sensitive N protein. The activated N protein shifts the Ca2+ requirement for phospholipase C activity from supraphysiological levels to ambient cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations. Cleavage of PIP2 results in the formation of the second messenger molecules, IP3 and 1,2-diacylglycerol, which can initiate cellular activation. These messengers also seem to activate responses which feed back to attenuate receptor stimulation of phospholipase.  相似文献   

10.
Many mammalian antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have multiple effects on antimicrobial immunity. We found that temporin A (TA), a representative frog-derived AMP, induced the migration of human monocytes, neutrophils, and macrophages with a bell-shaped response curve in a pertussis toxin-sensitive manner, activated p44/42 MAPK, and stimulated Ca(2+) flux in monocytes, suggesting that TA is capable of chemoattracting phagocytic leukocytes by the use of a G(ialpha) protein-coupled receptor. TA-induced Ca(2+) flux in monocytes was cross-desensitized by an agonistic ligand MMK-1 specific for formyl peptide receptor-like 1 (FPRL1) and vice versa, suggesting that TA uses FPRL1 as a receptor. This conclusion was confirmed by data showing that TA selectively stimulated chemotaxis of HEK 293 cells transfected with human FPRL1 or its mouse ortholog, murine formyl peptide receptor 2. In addition, TA elicited the infiltration of neutrophils and monocytes into the injection site of mice, indicating that TA is also functionally chemotactic in vivo. Examination of two additional temporins revealed that Rana-6 was also able to attract human phagocytes using FPRL1, but temporin 1P selectively induced the migration of neutrophils using a distinct receptor. Comparison of the chemotactic and antimicrobial activities of several synthetic analogues suggested that these activities are likely to rely on different structural characteristics. Overall, the results demonstrate that certain frog-derived temporins have the capacity to chemoattract phagocytes by the use of human FPRL1 (or its orthologs in other species), providing the first evidence suggesting the potential participation of certain amphibian antimicrobial peptides in host antimicrobial immunity.  相似文献   

11.
Leukocyte chemoattractants were inactivated when exposed to human neutrophils and either ingestible particles or phorbol esters. Loss of biologic activity was time- and temperature-dependent, required physiologic concentrations of viable neutrophils and a halide, and was inhibited by azide or catalase. Neutrophils from patients with either hereditary myeloperoxidase deficiency or chronic granulomatous disease failed to inactivate the chemoattractants unless purified myeloperoxidase or H2O2, respectively, was added. Susceptibility to inactivation by neutrophils correlated with the presence of methionine in the attractant. Loss of chemotactic activity was blocked by low concentrations of methionine and by higher concentrations of other reducing agents, but was unaffected by oxidized methionine. Paper chromatography demonstrated that exposure of a formyl-methionyl peptide chemotactic factor to either the cellfree myeloperoxidase system or stimulated neutrophils resulted in its conversion to a molecular species whose location in the chromatographs was identical to that of the peptide containing oxidized methionine. Thus, stimulated human neutrophils inactivate peptide chemoattractants by secretion of myeloperoxidase and H2O2, which combine with halides to form oxidants that react with a critical methionine residue. We suggest that myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation of thioethers may constitute an inflammatory control mechanism as well as a general means of modifying the functional properties of biologic mediators.  相似文献   

12.
Recent observations support an active role for the vascular endothelial cell in the induction and evolution of the inflammatory response. Since prior studies suggested that cultured bovine endothelial cells express high affinity binding sites for the neutrophil chemotactic oligopeptide formyl methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (f-Met-Leu-Phe), we sought to further characterize the interaction between formyl peptide chemoattractants and human vascular endothelial cells. Cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells and peripheral blood neutrophils specifically bound f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe, whereas specific binding to cultured fibroblasts, smooth muscle, and epithelial cells was negligible. Endothelial cells expressed 3.6 +/- 0.7 X 10(5) binding sites/cell with a Kd of 210 +/- 31 nM. Although the hexapeptide formyl norleucyl-leucyl-phenylalanyl-norleucyl-tyrosyl-lysine (f-Nle-Leu-Phe-Nle-Tyr-Lys) and the tetrapeptide f-Met-Leu-Phe-Lys completed with f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe for binding to endothelial cells, specific binding of 125I-f-Nl-Leu-Phe-Tyr-Lys or f-Met-Leu-Phe-Lys-fluorescein to endothelial cells was not observed, suggesting that steric constraints on formyl peptide binding differ between endothelial cells and leukocytes. At 37 degrees C, cell-associated f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe greatly exceeded that bound at 0 degrees C and was incorporated predominantly into a nondisplaceable compartment. Release of f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe or radioactive breakdown products from this compartment was time- and temperature-dependent with a t1/2 of approximately equal to 20 min at 37 degrees C. Resolution of the radioactive products released from f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe-loaded endothelial cells by thin layer chromatography indicated that greater than or equal to 57% of the released material co-migrated with intact f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe. Degradative release was blocked by agents that interfere with lysosomal acidification. The radioactive material released from f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe-loaded endothelial cells bound specifically to neutrophils. This binding was inhibited 50.2 +/- 6.4% by a greater than or equal to 10(3)-fold excess of nonradioactive f-Met-Leu-Phe whereas binding of authentic f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe was inhibited 89.4 +/- 3.0%. Supernatant obtained from f-Met-Leu-[3H]Phe-loaded endothelial cells elicited a rise in neutrophil cytosolic free calcium ([Ca2+]i) measured by quin2 fluorescence. The change in neutrophil [Ca2+]i depended on ligand binding to the neutrophil formyl peptide receptor since endothelial supernatants were devoid of activity in the presence of the f-Met-Leu-Phe antagonist, tert-butoxycarbonyl-Phe-Leu-Phe-Leu-Phe.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The prototypic formyl peptide N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLF) is a major chemoattractant found in Escherichia coli culture supernatants and a potent agonist at human formyl peptide receptor (FPR) 1. Consistent with this, fMLF induces bactericidal functions in human neutrophils at nanomolar concentrations. However, it is a much less potent agonist for mouse FPR (mFPR) 1 and mouse neutrophils, requiring micromolar concentrations for cell activation. To determine whether other bacteria produce more potent agonists for mFPR1, we examined formyl peptides from Listeria monocytogenes and Staphylococcus aureus for their abilities to activate mouse neutrophils. A pentapeptide (N-formyl-Met-Ile-Val-Ile-Leu (fMIVIL)) from L. monocytogenes and a tetrapeptide (N-formyl-Met-Ile-Phe-Leu (fMIFL)) from S. aureus were found to induce mouse neutrophil chemotaxis at 1-10 nM and superoxide production at 10-100 nM, similar to the potency of fMLF on human neutrophils. Using transfected cell lines expressing mFPR1 and mFPR2, which are major forms of FPRs in mouse neutrophils, we found that mFPR1 is responsible for the high potency of fMIVIL and fMIFL. In comparison, activation of mFPR2 requires micromolar concentrations of the two peptides. Genetic deletion of mfpr1 resulted in abrogation of neutrophil superoxide production and degranulation in response to fMIVIL and fMIFL, further demonstrating that mFPR1 is the primary receptor for detection of these formyl peptides. In conclusion, the formyl peptides from L. monocytogenes and S. aureus are approximately 100-fold more potent than fMLF in activating mouse neutrophils. The ability of mFPR1 to detect bacterially derived formyl peptides indicates that this important host defense mechanism is conserved in mice.  相似文献   

14.
Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) was shown to cause up to a 110% increase in the release into media of soluble chemoattractants for neutrophils by cultured rat bone marrow macrophages (RBMM) during a 16 hour incubation period. Coincubating with concentrations of PGE2 of 10 nM and below did not stimulate release of chemoattractants while concentrations between 10(2) and 10(4) nM increased the chemotactic activity of conditioned medium by 40% to 110% (p less than 0.05). In contrast to the effect of coincubating, pre-treatment with PGE2 for 2 and 4 hours was ineffective in stimulating the release of chemoattractants by RBMM. We also assessed whether PGE-2 modulated the release of chemoattractants by RBMM stimulated with endotoxin (LPS). LPS caused a four fold increase in the production of chemoattractants with a peak effect found at an LPS concentration of 1 microgram/ml. Coincubating with PGE2 in concentrations between 10(2) and 10(4) nM paradoxically decreased LPS-stimulated production of chemoattractants by up to 40% (p less than 0.05). Pre-treatment with PGE2 for 4 hours partially blocked LPS-stimulated release of chemotactic activity. These data indicate that PGE-2 has paradoxical effects on the production of chemoattractants by RBMM: being independently stimulatory but down regulating the effects of LPS. These findings suggest the possibility that the activation state of the RBMM may determine the effect of PGE2: quiescent RBMM can be stimulated by PGE2 but LPS-activated RBMM may be suppressed.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the interaction of cultured bovine aortic and pulmonary arterial endothelial cells and the proinflammatory vasoactive amines histamine, serotonin, and angiotensin II, causes production of three novel lipid neutrophil-specific chemoattractants that are distinct from other phospholipid or lipid neutrophil chemoattractants. In this study, we investigated the species and site specificity of this inflammatory response by incubating human aortic and pulmonary arterial endothelial cells with histamine, serotonin, and angiotensin II and assaying the supernatants for their effect on neutrophil migration. Each of these vasoactive amines caused production of neutrophil chemoattractant activity in a concentration dependent manner in both cell types. For each amine, production was blocked by a specific antagonist: cimetidine for histamine, methiothepin for serotonin-stimulated aortas, ketanserin for serotonin-stimulated pulmonary arteries, and saralasin for angiotensin II. In each case, all chemoattractant activity partitioned into the organic phase and resolution by HPLC yielded two chemotactic lipids. As with the lipid chemoattractants produced by bovine endothelial cells, these lipids did not coelute with PAF, LTB4, 5-HETE, or 15-HETE, nor did they increase lymphocyte or monocyte migration. The pattern of chemotactic activity following resolution by HPLC was similar in both human aortic and pulmonary arterial endothelial cells, but was different from that of bovine aortic and pulmonary arterial endothelial cells in that only two chemoattractant lipids appeared; the third chemotactic lipid was never produced. These studies demonstrate that human endothelial cells may actively participate in neutrophil enriched local inflammatory responses by production of neutrophil-specific chemotactic factors. They also suggest this response may be dissimilar depending on the site and species from which the endothelial cells originate.  相似文献   

16.
In bacteria, translation initiates with formyl-methionine; however, the N-terminal formyl group is usually removed by peptide deformylase, an enzymatic activity requiring iron. Staphylococcus aureus delta-toxin is a 26-amino-acid polypeptide secreted predominantly with a formylated N-terminal methionine, which led us to investigate regulation of delta-toxin deformylation. We observed that during exponential and early postexponential growth, delta-toxin accumulated in the culture medium in formylated and deformylated forms. In contrast, only formylated delta-toxin accumulated after the early postexponential phase. The transition from producing both species of delta-toxin to producing only formyl-methionine-containing delta-toxin coincided with increased tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activity. The TCA cycle contains several iron-requiring enzymes, which led us to hypothesize that TCA cycle induction depletes the iron in the culture medium, thereby inhibiting peptide deformylase activity. As expected, S. aureus depletes the iron in the culture medium between the postexponential and stationary phases of growth. Inhibition of delta-toxin deformylation was relieved by TCA cycle inactivation or by addition of supplemental iron to the culture medium. Of interest, peptides containing formyl-methionine are potent chemoattractants for neutrophils, suggesting that delta-toxin deformylation may have functional consequences. We found neutrophil chemotactic activity only with formylated delta-toxin. The S. aureus TCA cycle is derepressed upon depletion of rapidly catabolizable carbon sources; this coincides with the transition to producing only formylated delta-toxin and results in an increased inflammatory response. The proinflammatory response should increase host cell damage and result in the release of nutrients. Taken together, these results establish that there is an important linkage between bacterial metabolism and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

17.
Receptors for the bacterial chemotactic peptide fMLP are implicated in inflammation and host defense against microbial infection. We investigated the expression and function of fMLPR in microglial cells, which share characteristics of mononuclear phagocytes and play an important role in proinflammatory responses in the CNS. The expression of the genes encoding formyl peptide receptor (FPR)1 and FPR2, the high- and low-affinity fMLPR, was detected in a murine microglial cell line N9, but these cells did not respond to chemotactic agonists known for these receptors. N9 cells incubated with bacterial LPS increased the expression of fMLPR genes and developed a species of specific, but low-affinity, binding sites for fMLP, in association with marked calcium mobilization and chemotaxis responses to fMLP in a concentration range that typically activated the low-affinity receptor FPR2. In addition, LPS-treated N9 cells were chemoattracted by two FPR2-specific agonists, the HIV-1 envelope-derived V3 peptide, and the 42 aa form of the amyloid beta peptide which is a pathogenic agent in Alzheimer's disease. Primary murine microglial cells also expressed FPR1 and FPR2 genes, but similar to N9 cells, exhibited FPR2-mediated activation only after LPS treatment. In contrast to its effect on the function of FPR2, LPS reduced N9 cell binding and biological responses to the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor-1alpha. Thus, LPS selectively modulates the function of chemoattractant receptors in microglia and may promote host response in inflammatory diseases in the CNS.  相似文献   

18.
Purified lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from Veillonella incubated in normal rabbit serum was tested for chemotactic activity on rabbit polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) in modified Boyden chambers. In doses above those giving optimal response (over-optimal dose), a decrease of the PMN migration activity was found. This decrease also correlated well with an increase in the migration inhibition of the PMNs as demonstrated with the capillary tube assay. The PMN chemotactic factor isolated from LPS-induced inflammatory exudate (LPS-CF) in rabbits, produced both a decrease in chemotactic response and a migration inhibition of PMNs in over-optimal doses. This inhibitory effect was not due to cytotoxicity, proved by the trypan blue exclusion test. Also, a reduced locomotion of PMNs first preincubated with chemoattractants and then reactivated, was shown when the same PMNs were restimulated to migration using the same chemoattractants. This was interpreted as a deactivation of the cells. A cross-deactivation was demonstrated between LPS-CF and casein. The results from the experiments reported show that the Boyden chamber may be used to disciminate directional chemotaxis and migration inhibition. It may also be concluded from the study that the reduced migration activity of PMNs at over-optimal doses of chemoattractants is not due to cytotoxicity, but most probably is caused by a deactivation of the cells.  相似文献   

19.
The therapeutic efficacy of the sulfones, dapsone, and sulfoxone in neutrophilic dermatoses may be related to the effects of these drugs on neutrophil function. Therefore we determined whether neutrophil chemotactic migration to various chemoattractants could be inhibited by sulfones in vitro. The chemotactic responses of human neutrophils from healthy donors were tested by using N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (F-met-leu-phe), purified human C5a, and leukocyte-derived chemotactic factor (LDCF). Therapeutic concentrations of sulfones selectively inhibited neutrophil chemotaxis to F-met-leu-phe, but did not affect neutrophil chemotaxis to LDCF or C5a. Inhibition of neutrophil chemotaxis to F-met-leu-phe was induced by both dapsone and sulfoxone at a concentration of 10 micrograms/ml without affecting random migration, and the inhibition was reversed by washing the neutrophils. When dapsone- and sulfoxone-treated neutrophils (100 micrograms/ml) were stimulated with F-met-leu-phe, neutrophil superoxide generation was not inhibited. Sulfapyridine (10 micrograms/ml) also selectively inhibited neutrophil chemotaxis to F-met-leu-phe; however, sulfamethoxazole and sulfisoxazole did not affect chemotaxis. The inhibitory effects of dapsone, sulfoxone, and sulfapyridine could not be demonstrated with granulocytes from rabbits or guinea pigs nor with human monocytes. Experiments with radiolabeled dapsone showed rapid, nonspecific, and reversible binding of dapsone to human neutrophils. These data suggest that a mechanism of action of sulfones in neutrophilic dermatoses may be a selective inhibition of neutrophil migration to as yet undefined chemoattractants in the skin.  相似文献   

20.
Human blood eosinophils and neutrophils that had been incubated with the supernatants of cultures of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated blood mononuclear cells demonstrated respective enhanced abilities to produce immunoreactive leukotriene C4 (LTC4) and immunoreactive leukotriene B4 (LTB4) after activation by the calcium ionophore A23187. Under optimal conditions, the enhancing effect was observed with the eosinophils (n = 21) and the neutrophils (n = 14) from all but one donor of each type of granulocyte. Enhancement was maximum when granulocytes were preincubated with a 1/3 dilution of LPS-stimulated mononuclear cell culture supernatants for 1 to 2.5 min and were then stimulated with 2.5 microM ionophore for 1 to 2 min (neutrophils) or 15 min (eosinophils). Maximal enhancement ranged from 20 to 4500% for LTC4 generation by eosinophils (geometric mean, 87%) and from 30 to 1600% for LTB4 generation by neutrophils (geometric mean, 105%). There was no enhancement of leukotriene biosynthesis when the LPS-stimulated mononuclear cell culture supernatants and ionophore were added simultaneously to the granulocytes. The enhancing activity for LTC4 generation by eosinophils was removed by washing the cells after the addition of the LPS-stimulated mononuclear cell culture supernatants and before the introduction of ionophore. This enhancing activity was produced by Ig-, Leu-1- adherent blood mononuclear cells, which are presumed to be monocytes; supernatants of adherent cells augmented A23187-induced LTC4 generation by eosinophils from 21 to 2300% (geometric mean, 402%) in 11 experiments and LTB4 generation by neutrophils from 7 to 200% (geometric mean, 60%) in 10 experiments. There was an inverse correlation between the percent enhancement and the LTC4 levels produced by stimulated eosinophils in the absence of the monokine(s) (r = -0.79, p less than 0.01), but not between percent enhancement and the LTB4 levels generated by ionophore-activated neutrophils in the control buffer. The activity of the monocyte-derived enhancing material on each type of granulocyte was relatively heat stable. Enhancement of eosinophil production of LTC4 was associated with an acidic group of monocyte-derived molecules having isoelectric points of 4.2 to 4.3, 4.5 to 4.6, and 4.9, and exhibiting marked heterogeneity in size.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

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