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1.
A quantitative study of the role of F-actin in producing neutrophil shape   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Neutrophils change shape from round to polar and sequentially polymerize/depolymerize actin following chemotactic peptide activation in suspension. To study the relationship between changes in F-actin content and shape we altered the kinetics/extent of actin polymerization and depolymerization with tBOC peptide, cytochalasin D (CD), and low-dose FMLP, and determined the effect of these alterations on the temporal sequence of changes in neutrophil shape. F-actin was measured by FACS analysis of NBDphallacidin-stained cells and expressed as relative fluorescent intensity (RFI) compared to control (RFI = 1.00). Shape was determined by scanning electron microscopy. FMLP causes serial polymerization/depolymerization of actin (RFI = 1.00 +/- 0.04, 1.60 +/- 0.21, 1.10 +/- 0.18, and 1.05 +/- 0.14) associated with four distinct shapes (round-smooth, round-ruffled, blebbed, and polar) noted at 0, 30, 90, 300 sec respectively. Since blebbed and polar shapes appear concurrent with depolymerization and following polymerization, we determined whether depolymerization is required for polarization of cells. The kinetics of depolymerization were: (1) accelerated by tBOC addition at 45 sec, and (2) slowed by high concentrations of FMLP (greater than 10-7M) (300 sec RFI = 1.46). Neither change altered the time course of shape change. To determine whether duration of actin polymerization defines shape, polymerization was halted by addition of tBOC at 5, 10, 20, 30 sec after FMLP to block actin polymerization and shape was monitored at 300 sec. TBOC added 5-20 sec after FMLP limited neutrophil shape change to the blebbed form, while tBOC addition 30 sec following FMLP resulted in a polar shape at 300 sec. To determine whether the extent of actin polymerization affects the shape change sequence, polymerization was limited by (1) inhibition of polymerization with CD, (2) exposure of cells to low concentrations of FMLP (less than 10-9 M), and (3) interruption of polymerization with tBOC. Actin polymerization to RFI less than 1.35-fold basal results in blebbed shape; polymerization greater than 1.35-fold basal yields polar shape. The data show: (1) the human neutrophil demonstrates intermediate shapes when activated by chemotactic peptide, (2) depolymerization of F-actin does not determine shape, and (3) blebbed shape appears when actin polymerizes for greater than 5 sec; polar shape with polymerization greater than or equal to 30 sec to RFI greater than 1.35-fold basal. The data suggest actin polymerization is required for, and extent of polymerization determines, the shape of human neutrophils.  相似文献   

2.
The role of WASP-interacting protein (WIP) in the process of F-actin assembly during chemotaxis of Dictyostelium was examined. Mutations of the WH1 domain of WASP led to a reduction in binding to WIPa, a newly identified homolog of mammalian WIP, a reduction of F-actin polymerization at the leading edge, and a reduction in chemotactic efficiency. WIPa localizes to sites of new pseudopod protrusion and colocalizes with WASP at the leading edge. WIPa increases F-actin elongation in vivo and in vitro in a WASP-dependent manner. WIPa translocates to the cortical membrane upon uniform cAMP stimulation in a time course that parallels F-actin polymerization. WIPa-overexpressing cells exhibit multiple microspike formation and defects in chemotactic efficiency due to frequent changes of direction. Reduced expression of WIPa by expressing a hairpin WIPa (hp WIPa) construct resulted in more polarized cells that exhibit a delayed response to a new chemoattractant source due to delayed extension of pseudopod toward the new gradient. These results suggest that WIPa is required for new pseudopod protrusion and prompt reorientation of cells toward a new gradient by initiating localized bursts of actin polymerization and/or elongation.  相似文献   

3.
Actin polymerization and pseudopod extension during amoeboid chemotaxis   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Amoebae of the cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum are an excellent model system for the study of amoeboid chemotaxis. These cells can be studied as a homogeneous population whose response to chemotactic stimulation is sufficiently synchronous to permit the correlation of the changes in cell shape and biochemical events during chemotaxis. Having demonstrated this synchrony of response, we show that actin polymerization occurs in two stages during stimulation with chemoattractants. The assembly of F-actin that peaks between 40 and 60 sec after the onset of stimulation is temporally correlated with the growth of new pseudopods. F-actin, which is assembled by 60 sec after stimulation begins, is localized in the new pseudopods that are extended at this time. Both stages of actin polymerization during chemotactic stimulation involve polymerization at the barbed ends of actin filaments based on the cytochalasin sensitivity of this response. We present a hypothesis in which actin polymerization is one of the major driving forces for pseudopod extension during chemotaxis. The predictions of this model, that localized regulation of actin nucleation activity and actin filament cross-linking must occur, are discussed in the context of current models for signal transduction and of recent information regarding the types of actin-binding proteins that are present in the cell cortex.  相似文献   

4.
Pentoxifylline (PTX) has been reported to enhance the early accumulation of neutrophils at the site of Staphylococcus aureus subcutaneous infection in mice (1) and to stimulate in vitro PMN chemotaxis, particularly under dense agarose (2). Among the biochemical events contributing to chemotaxis are actin polymerization (3). The membrane cytoskeleton is believed to control the lateral mobility of integral membrane proteins as well as influencing cell shape and mobility. Thus, pharmacological modulations of neutrophil chemotaxis may be related to an effect of the pharmacological agents on the membrane cytoskeleton. The present study was designed to characterize the effect of PTX on actin polymerization of freely-suspended PMN before and after stimulation by the chemotactic factor f-MLP. We used flow cytometry to determine the proportion of actin in the filamentous form, and Rhodamine-Phalloidin as fluorescent probe (4). PTX decreased actin polymerization in response to stimulation by f-MLP. The reduction in F-actin by PTX was higher in the samples with higher activation ratios as compared with untreated PMN.  相似文献   

5.
Elmo proteins positively regulate actin polymerization during cell migration and phagocytosis through activation of the small G protein Rac. We identified an Elmo-like protein, ElmoA, in Dictyostelium discoideum that unexpectedly functions as a negative regulator of actin polymerization. Cells lacking ElmoA display an elevated rate of phagocytosis, increased pseudopod formation, and excessive F-actin localization within pseudopods. ElmoA associates with cortical actin and myosin II. TIRF microscopic observations of functional ElmoA-GFP reveal that a fraction of ElmoA localizes near the presumptive actin/myosin II cortex and the levels of ElmoA and myosin II negatively correlate with that of polymerizing F-actin. F-actin-regulated dynamic dispersions of ElmoA and myosin II are interdependent. Taken together, our data suggest that ElmoA modulates actin/myosin II at the cortex to prevent excessive F-actin polymerization around the cell periphery, thereby maintaining proper cell shape during phagocytosis and chemotaxis.  相似文献   

6.
Aggregation-competent amoeboid cells of Dictyostelium discoideum are chemotactic toward cAMP. Video microscopy and scanning electron microscopy were used to quantitate changes in cell morphology and locomotion during uniform upshifts in the concentration of cAMP. These studies demonstrate that morphological and motile responses to cAMP are sufficiently synchronous within a cell population to allow relevant biochemical analyses to be performed on large numbers of cells. Changes in cell behavior were correlated with F-actin content by using an NBD-phallacidin binding assay. These studies demonstrate that actin polymerization occurs in two stages in response to stimulation of cells with extracellular cAMP and involves the addition of monomers to the cytochalasin D-sensitive (barbed) ends of actin filaments. The second stage of actin assembly, which peaks at 60 sec following an upshift in cAMP concentration, is temporally correlated with the growth of new pseudopods. The F-actin assembled by 60 sec is localized in these new pseudopods. These results indicate that actin polymerization may constitute one of the driving forces for pseudopod extension in amoeboid cells and that nucleation sites regulating polymerization are under the control of chemotaxis receptors.  相似文献   

7.
Fluorescent derivatives of phalloidin are widely used to measure filamentous actin (F-actin) levels and to stabilize F-actin. We have characterized the kinetics and affinity of binding of tetramethylrhodaminyl (TRITC)-phalloidin to rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin and to F-actin in lysates of rabbit polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). We have defined conditions where TRITC-phalloidin can be used to inhibit F-actin depolymerization and to quantify F-actin without prior fixation. By equilibrium measurements, the affinity of TRITC-phalloidin binding to rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin (pyrene labeled) or to PMN lysate F-actin was 1-4 x 10(-7) M. In both cases, the stoichiometry of binding was approximately 1:1. Kinetic measurements of TRITC-phalloidin binding to PMN lysate F-actin resulted in an association rate constant of 420 +/- 120 M-1 sec-1 and a dissociation rate constant of 8.3 +/- 0.9 x 10(-5) sec-1. The affinity calculated from the kinetic measurements (2 +/- 1 x 10(-7) M) agreed well with that obtained by equilibrium measurements. The rate with which 0.6 microM TRITC-phalloidin inhibited 0.1 microM pyrenyl F-actin depolymerization (90% inhibition in 10 sec) was much faster than the rate of binding to pyrenyl F-actin (less than 1% bound in 10 sec), suggesting that phalloidin binds to filament ends more rapidly than to the rest of the filament. We show that TRITC-phalloidin can be used to measure F-actin levels in cell lysates when G-actin is also present (i.e., in cell lysates at high concentrations) if DNase I is included to prevent phalloidin-induced polymerization.  相似文献   

8.
LimC and LimD are two novel LIM proteins of Dictyostelium, which are comprised of double and single LIM domains, respectively. Green fluorescent protein-fused LimC and LimD proteins preferentially accumulate at areas of the cell cortex where they co-localize with actin and associate transiently with cytoskeleton-dependent dynamic structures like phagosomes, macropinosomes and pseudopods. Furthermore, both LimC and LimD interact directly with F-actin in vitro. Mutant cells that lack either LimC or LimD, or both, exhibit normal growth. They are, however, significantly impaired in growth under stress conditions and are highly sensitive to osmotic shock, suggesting that LimC and LimD contribute towards the maintenance of cortical strength. Moreover, we noted an altered morphology and F-actin distribution in LimD(-) and LimC(-)/D(-) mutants, and changes in chemotactic motility associated with an increased pseudopod formation. Our results reveal both unique and overlapping roles for LimC and LimD, and suggest that both act directly on the actin cytoskeleton and provide rigidity to the cortex.  相似文献   

9.
Leukocyte recruitment to inflammatory foci is generally associated with cellular activation. Recent evidence suggests that chemotactic agents can be divided into two classes, “classical chemoattractants” such as FMLP, C5a, and IL-8, which stimulate directed migration and activation events and “pure chemoattractants” such as TGF-β1 which influence actin polymerisation and movement but not oxidative burst and associated granular enzyme release. The studies reported here demonstrate that the murine S100 chemoattractant protein, CP-10, belongs to the “non-classical” group. Despite its potent chemotactic activity for neutrophils and monocytes/macrophages, CP-10 failed to increase [Ca2+]i in human or mouse PMN, although chemotaxis was inhibited by pertussis toxin, confirming the suggestion of a novel Ca2+-independent G-protein-coupled pathway for post-receptor signal transduction triggered by “pure chemoattractants.” The co-ordinated up-regulation of Mac-1 and down-regulation of L-selectin induced by FMLP on human PMN in vitro was not observed with CP-10. Quantitative changes in immediate (30 s) actin polymerisation occurred with FMLP and CP-10-treated human PMN. The relative F-actin increases induced in WEHI 265 monocytoid cells by FMLP and CP-10 was optimal at 60 s and declined over 120 s. F-actin changes reflected the concentration and potencies of the agonists required to provoke chemotaxis. After 90 min, CP-10 profoundly altered cell shape and increased both cell size and F-actin within pseudopodia. These changes are typical of those mediating leukocyte deformability, and CP-10 may mediate leukocyte retention within microcapillaries and thereby contribute to the initiation of inflammation in vascular beds. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Localization of mRNA is a well-described mechanism to account for the asymmetric distribution of proteins in polarized somatic cells and embryos of animals. In zygotes of the brown alga Fucus, F-actin is localized at the site of polar growth and accumulates at the cell plates of the first two divisions of the embryo. We used a nonradioactive, whole-mount in situ hybridization protocol to show the pattern of actin mRNA localization. Until the first cell division, the pattern of actin mRNA localization is identical to that of total poly(A)+ RNA, that is, a symmetrical distribution in the zygote followed by an actin-dependent accumulation at the thallus pole at the time of polar axis fixation. At the end of the first division, actin mRNA specifically is redistributed from the thallus pole to the cell plates of the first two divisions in the rhizoid. This specific pattern of localization in the zygote and embryo involves the redistribution of previously synthesized actin mRNA. The initial asymmetry of actin mRNA at the thallus pole of the zygote requires polar axis fixation and microfilaments but not microtubules, cell division, or polar growth. However, redistribution of actin mRNA from the thallus pole to the first cell plate is insensitive to cytoskeletal inhibitors but is dependent on cell plate formation. The F-actin that accumulates at the rhizoid tip is not accompanied by the localization of actin mRNA. However, maintenance of an accumulation of actin protein at the cell plates of the rhizoid could be explained, at least partially, by a mechanism involving localization of actin mRNA at these sites. The pattern and requirements for actin mRNA localization in the Fucus embryo may be relevant to polarization of the embryo and asymmetric cell divisions in higher plants as well as in other tip-growing plant cells.  相似文献   

11.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,127(6):1637-1653
We show here using time-lapse video tapes that cytoplasmic streaming causes nuclear migration along the anterior-posterior axis (axial expansion) in the early syncytial embryo of Drosophila melanogaster. Using confocal microscopy and labeled phalloidin we explore the distribution of F-actin during axial expansion. We find that a network of F-actin fibers fills the cytoplasm in the embryo. This actin network partially disassembles around the nuclei during axial expansion. Our observations of normal development, fixed embryos, and drug injection experiments indicate that disassembly of the actin network generates cytoplasmic movements. We suggest that the cell cycle regulates disassembly of the actin network, and that this process may be mediated directly or indirectly by the microtubules. The cytoplasmic movements we observe during axial expansion are very similar to fountain streaming in the pseudopod of amoebae, and by analogy with the pseudopod we propose a working hypothesis for axial expansion based on solation-contraction coupling within the actin network.  相似文献   

12.
C H Packman  M A Lichtman 《Blood cells》1990,16(1):193-205; discussion 205-7
Actin, which comprises approximately 10% of the weight of cytoplasmic protein of neutrophils, is the principal component of the cytoplasmic microfilament lattice. It can exist in either of two physical states, G-actin, which is monomeric, or F-actin, which is polymeric or filamentous. Actin microfilaments support many forms of cell movement. Continuous remodeling of the microfilament lattice, which seems integral to sustained movement, is possible in part because of the ability of actin to change rapidly between its monomeric G-state and its filamentous F-state. Changes in the G- and F-actin equilibrium may be studied by flow analysis using a fluorescent probe which is specific for F-actin, 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole-(NBD)-phallacidin. Alterations in neutrophil F-actin have been measured in response to chemotactic agents (e.g., formyl peptides and leukotriene B4), inhibitors of cell movement (e.g., N-ethylmaleimide and cytochalasin B), agents that promote the oxidative burst (e.g., formyl peptides and phorbol esters), and priming agents [e.g., tumor necrosis factor (TNF)]. Measurements may be taken at intervals of a few seconds, allowing comparison of rapid changes in the F-actin content to other rapidly occurring changes, such as altered membrane ion permeability and activation of cellular enzymes. The use of metabolic inhibitors has allowed dissection of some of the biochemical pathways involved in actin assembly in living cells. Although clinical studies are few thus far, the technique has also been used to study basal and stimulated F-actin levels in circulating neutrophils in neonates and in family members of patients with neutrophil-actin dysfunction.  相似文献   

13.
Immunofluorescence and cytochemical studies have demonstrated that filamentous actin is mainly localized in the cortical surface of the chromaffin cell. It has been suggested that these actin filament networks act as a barrier to the secretory granules, impeding their contact with the plasma membrane. Stimulation of chromaffin cells produces a disassembly of actin filament networks, implying the removal of the barrier. The presence of gelsolin and scinderin, two Ca(2+)-dependent actin filament severing proteins, in the cortical surface of the chromaffin cells, suggests the possibility that cell stimulation brings about activation of one or more actin filament severing proteins with the consequent disruption of actin networks. Therefore, biochemical studies and fluorescence microscopy experiments with scinderin and gelsolin antibodies and rhodamine-phalloidin, a probe for filamentous actin, were performed in cultured chromaffin cells to study the distribution of scinderin, gelsolin, and filamentous actin during cell stimulation and to correlate the possible changes with catecholamine secretion. Here we report that during nicotinic stimulation or K(+)-evoked depolarization, subcortical scinderin but not gelsolin is redistributed and that this redistribution precedes catecholamine secretion. The rearrangement of scinderin in patches is mediated by nicotinic receptors. Cell stimulation produces similar patterns of distribution of scinderin and filamentous actin. However, after the removal of the stimulus, the recovery of scinderin cortical pattern of distribution is faster than F-actin reassembly, suggesting that scinderin is bound in the cortical region of the cell to a component other than F-actin. We also demonstrate that peripheral actin filament disassembly and subplasmalemmal scinderin redistribution are calcium-dependent events. Moreover, experiments with an antibody against dopamine-beta-hydroxylase suggest that exocytosis sites are preferentially localized to areas of F-actin disassembly.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Previous studies of fluorescence probes for labeling the monomeric actin pool have demonstrated lack of specificity. We have used quantitative analytical methods to assess the sensitivity and specificity of rhodamine DNAse I as a probe for monomeric (G) actin. The G-actin pool of attached or suspended fibroblasts was stabilized by ice-cold glycerol and MgCl2. Formaldehyde fixation was used to clamp the filamentous (F) actin pool. G- and F-actins were stained by rhodamine DNAse I and FITC-phalloidin, respectively. Confocal microscopy indicated that the G- and F-actins were spatially separate in substrate-attached cells. Flow cytometry and fluorescence spectrophotometry demonstrated low co-labeling of the separate actin pools, although measureable background binding of rhodamine DNAse I was detectable. Estimates of the extent of actin polymerization after trypsinization demonstrated reciprocal changes of monomeric and filamentous actins, consistent with the formation of a perinuclear array of F-actin. The labeling and quantitation methods were also sufficiently sensitive to detect cell type-dependent variations in actin content. Dual labeling of cells with rhodamine DNAse I and FITC-phalloidin may provide a simple and direct method to image and quantify actin rearrangement in individual cells.  相似文献   

16.
The serine proteinase inhibitor heparin cofactor II (HC) can be cleaved by polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) elastase (LE) to yield potent chemotactic activity for PMN and monocytes. In contrast to the bacterially-derived chemotaxin formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP), the HC-derived chemotaxin does not stimulate PMN degranulation or oxidative burst activity. We compared the effects of HC-derived chemotaxins to the effects of fMLP on PMN actin conformation and on the cAMP levels. Both the HC chemotaxins and fMLP rapidly induced an increase in F-actin which was similar in magnitude and time-course. However, in contrast to fMLP, HC-derived chemotaxins did not elevate cAMP levels. HC-derived chemotaxins may be useful probes of chemotactic responses, since they do not have the mixed biological activities of fMLP.  相似文献   

17.
Formyl-met-leu-phe (fMLP) induces actin assembly in neutrophils; the resultant increase in F-actin content correlates with an increase in the rate of cellular locomotion at fMLP concentrations less than or equal to 10(-8) M (Howard, T.H., and W.H. Meyer, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 98:1265-1271). We studied the time course of change in F-actin content, F-actin distribution, and cell shape after fMLP stimulation. F-actin content was quantified by fluorescence activated cell sorter analysis of nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin-stained cells (Howard, T.H., 1982, J. Cell Biol., 95(2, Pt. 2:327a). F-actin distribution and cell shape were determined by analysis of fluorescence photomicrographs of nitrobenzoxadiazole-phallacidin-stained cells. After fMLP stimulation at 25 degrees C, there is a rapid actin polymerization that is maximal (up to 2.0 times the control level) at 45 s; subsequently, the F-actin depolymerizes to an intermediate F-actin content 5-10 min after stimulation. The depolymerization of F-actin reflects a true decrease in F-actin content since the quantity of probe extractable from cells also decreases between 45 s and 10 min. The rate of actin polymerization (3.8 +/- 0.3-4.4 +/- 0.6% increase in F-actin/s) is the same for 10(-10) - 10(-6) M fMLP and the polymerization is inhibited by cytochalasin D. The initial rate of F-actin depolymerization (6.0 +/- 1.0-30 +/- 5% decrease in F-actin/min) is inversely proportional to fMLP dose. The F-actin content of stimulated cells at 45 s and 10 min is greater than control levels and varies directly with fMLP dose. F-actin distribution and cell shape also vary as a function of time after stimulation. 45 s after stimulation the cells are rounded and F-actin is diffusely distributed; 10 min after stimulation the cell is polarized and F-actin is focally distributed. These results indicate that actin polymerization and depolymerization follow fMLP stimulation in sequence, the rate of depolymerization and the maximum and steady state F-actin content but not the rate of polymerization are fMLP dose dependent, and concurrent with F-actin depolymerization, F-actin is redistributed and the cell changes shape.  相似文献   

18.
Numerous studies have described the F-actin cytoskeleton; however, little information relevant to C-actin is available. The actin pools of bovine aortic endothelial cells were examined using in situ and in vitro conditions and fluorescent probes for G-(deoxyribonuclease I.0.3 μM) or F-actin (phalloidin, 0.2 μM). Cells in situ displayed a diffuse G-actin distribution, while F-actin was concentrated in the cell periphery and in fine stress fibers that traversed some cells. Cells of subconfluent or just confluent cultures demonstrated intense fluorescence, with many F-actin stress fibers. Postconfluent cultures resembled the condition in situ; peripheral F-actin was prominent, traversing actin stress fibers were greatly reduced and fluorescent intensity was diminished. Postconfluency had little influence on G-actin. with only an enhancement in the intensity of G-actin punctate fluorescence. When post-confluent cultures were incubated with cytochalasin D (15 min; 10--4 M), F-actin networks were disrupted and actin punctate and diffuse fluorescence increased. G-actin fluorescence was not altered by the incubation. Although its unstructured nature may account for the minor changes observed, the stability of the G-actin pool in the presence of notable F-actin modulations suggested that filamentous actin was the key constituent involved in these actin cytoskeletal alterations. A separate finding illustrated that the concomitant use of actin probes with image enhancement and fluorescent microscopy could reveal simultaneously the G- and F-actin pools within the same cell.  相似文献   

19.
The cytoskeleton is a dynamic structure that plays a key role in maintaining cell morphology and function. This study investigates the effect of bacterial wall lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a strong inflammatory agent, on the dynamics and organization of actin, tubulin, vimentin, and vinculin proteins in human gingival fibroblasts (HGF). A time-dependent study showed a noticeable change in actin architecture after 1.5 h of incubation with LPS (1 microg/ml) with the formation of orthogonal fibers and further accumulation of actin filament at the cell periphery by 24 h. When 0.01-10 microg/ml of LPS was added to human gingival fibroblast cultures, cells acquired a round, flat shape and gradually developed cytoplasmic ruffling. Lipopolysaccharides extracted from Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans periodontopathogenic bacteria promoted alterations in F-actin stress fibres of human gingival cells. Normally, human gingival cells have F-actin fibres that are organized in linear distribution throughout the cells, extending along the cell's length. LPS-treated cells exhibited changes in cytoskeletal protein organization, and F-actin was reorganized by the formation of bundles underneath and parallel to the cell membrane. We also found the reorganization of the vimentin network into vimentin bundling after 1.5 h of treatment. HGF cells exhibited diffuse and granular gamma-tubulin stain. There was no change in LPS-treated HGF. However, vinculin plaques distributed in the cell body diminished after LPS treatment. We conclude that the dynamic and structured organization of cytoskeletal filaments and actin assembly in human gingival fibroblasts is altered by LPS treatment and is accompanied by a decrease in F-actin pools.  相似文献   

20.
C-reactive protein (CRP) inhibits neutrophil movement through a p38 MAP kinase pathway. We hypothesized that CRP altered F-actin content and distribution on human neutrophils as a means of inhibiting movement. CRP produced simultaneous increased F-actin and decreased G-actin levels. CRP increased F-actin levels in a concentration-dependent manner once a threshold (>100 microg/ml) was reached, and transiently increased F-actin (peak levels at 2.5 and 10 min) that returned to baseline by 30 min. Confocal microscopy of neutrophils revealed that fMLP provoked acquisition of a migratory phenotype as evidenced by the appearance of F-actin rich lamellipods. In contrast, CRP caused neutrophil rounding, prevented lamellipod formation and shifted F-actin from the cytoskeleton to the cortex. The p38 MAP kinase inhibitor, SB203580, produced a similar effect on neutrophil shape. Concentrations of SB203580 that dramatically decreased p38 activity in neutrophils also caused round cell morphology and cortical F-actin distribution. Since CRP inhibits p38 MAP kinase and p38 blockade leads to actin polymerization and prevention of lamellipod formation, it is concluded that round morphology and loss of lamellipod formation result from CRP inhibition of p38 MAP kinase. Understanding the signal transduction of CRP prevention of lamellipod formation will aid in the development of therapeutic agents against neutrophil-associated inflammatory disease.  相似文献   

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