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1.
The expression of CD10/CALLA is associated primarily with childhood leukemia of pre-B lymphocyte phenotype. We have compared the hybridization pattern of the CALLA gene from leukemic and normal cells digested with several restriction enzymes. No alterations were noticed with Eco RI, Sac I, Pvu II, Eco RV, Hind III, and Msp I. Since CALLA is also found on other malignancies, we analyzed DNA samples prepared from cell lines derived from leukemia, lymphoma, glioblastoma, retinoblastoma, and neuroblastoma. Normal restriction patterns were observed for all the lines regardless of their CALLA phenotype. Having demonstrated previously that CALLA was structurally identical to neutral endopeptidase 3.4.24.11 (NEP), we have now established a correlation between surface expression of CALLA and NEP activity on leukemia samples and on several cell lines. Malignant cells tested expressed a functionally active enzyme and no gross alteration was present in the CALLA gene. The CD44 gene is expressed on most cells of hemopoietic origin and on greater than 95% of cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloblastic leukemia studied. It is also expressed on normal astrocytes and on malignant cells of glioma/astrocytoma types. We now report that a similar pattern of hybridization was observed with Sac I, Pvu II, and Eco RI for leukemic samples, normal cells, and malignant cell lines. A polymorphism was recently detected for CD44 using Hind III; leukemic cells and malignant lines also showed this normal polymorphism. Thus no deletion or insertion could be detected in the CD44 gene of leukemic cells and malignant lines, suggesting that no gross DNA alterations were involved. The correlation between surface expression and enzymatic activity of CD10/CALLA and the expression of CD44 on a variety of malignant cells would suggest that the structure and function of these two gene products are probably not altered by the process of transformation.  相似文献   

2.
Neutral endopeptidase (EC 3.4.24.11, NEP) is an integral membrane protein of human neutrophils. NEP is identical with the common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA) of leukemic cells. The expression of NEP on the surface of neutrophils is down-regulated by endocytosis which can be induced by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) at 37 degrees C. The activity of the enzyme on the surface of intact cells decreases by 76% within 5 min. The activity can be recovered, however, if the cells are lysed within 5 min of the endocytosis. After 30 min, only 32% of the NEP activity is present in the neutrophil lysates. The loss of activity is presumably due to proteolytic inactivation. Diacylglycerol and monoclonal antibody to CALLA/NEP also induce internalization of NEP. PMA induces endocytosis even at 4 degrees C, but NEP is not inactivated at that temperature. The disappearance of NEP activity after adding PMA was inhibited by various agents. Among the most active were the phospholipase inhibitor 4-bromophenacyl bromide and a combination of the serine protease and cathepsin inhibitors, diisopropylfluorophosphate and N-ethylmaleimide. The employment of fluorescent monoclonal antibody confirmed the down-regulation and internalization of NEP antigen on the neutrophils. Since NEP inactivates chemotactic peptides and thereby affects chemotaxis of neutrophils (Painter, R. G., Dukes, R., Sullivan, J., Carter, R., Erd?s, E. G., and Johnson, A. R. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 9456-9461), the down-regulation of NEP activity on the cell membrane may modulate the function of these cells in inflammation.  相似文献   

3.
Leukocyte-specific protein 1 (LSP1) is an intracellular filamentous-actin binding protein which modulates cell motility. The cellular process in which LSP1 functions to regulate motility is not yet identified. In this study, we show that LSP1 negatively regulates fMLP-induced polarization and chemotaxis of neutrophils through its function on adhesion via specific integrins. Using LSP1-deficient (Lsp1(-/-)) mice, we show increased neutrophil migration into mouse knee joints during zymosan-induced acute inflammation, an inflammatory model in which the number of resident synoviocytes are not affected by LSP1-deficiency. In vitro chemotaxis experiments performed by time-lapse videomicroscopy showed that purified Lsp1(-/-) bone-marrow neutrophils exhibit an increased migration rate toward a gradient of fMLP as compared with wild-type neutrophils. This difference was observed when cells migrated on fibrinogen, but not fibronectin, suggesting a role for LSP1 in modulating neutrophil adhesion by specific integrins. LSP1 is also a negative regulator of fMLP-induced adhesion to fibrinogen or ICAM-1, but not to ICAM-2, VCAM-1, or fibronectin. These results suggest that LSP1 regulates the function of Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18), which binds only to fibrinogen and ICAM-1 among the substrates we tested. fMLP-induced filamentous actin polarization is also increased in the absence of LSP1 when cells were layered on fibrinogen, but not on fibronectin. Our findings suggest that the increased neutrophil recruitment in Lsp1(-/-) mice during acute inflammation derives from the negative regulatory role of LSP1 on neutrophil adhesion, polarization, and migration via specific integrins, such as Mac-1, which mediate neutrophil responses to chemotactic stimuli.  相似文献   

4.
Polymorphonuclear neutrophils release ATP in response to stimulation by chemoattractants, such as the peptide N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. Released ATP and the hydrolytic product adenosine regulate chemotaxis of neutrophils by sequentially activating purinergic nucleotide and adenosine receptors, respectively. Here we show that that ecto-nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase 1 (E-NTPDase1, CD39) is a critical enzyme for hydrolysis of released ATP by neutrophils and for cell migration in response to multiple agonists (N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, interleukin-8, and C5a). Upon stimulation of human neutrophils or differentiated HL-60 cells in a chemotactic gradient, E-NTPDase1 tightly associates with the leading edge of polarized cells during chemotaxis. Inhibition of E-NTPDase1 reduces the migration speed of neutrophils but not their ability to detect the orientation of the gradient field. Studies of neutrophils from E-NTPDase1 knock-out mice reveal similar impairments of chemotaxis in vitro and in vivo. Thus, E-NTPDase1 plays an important role in regulating neutrophil chemotaxis by facilitating the hydrolysis of extracellular ATP.  相似文献   

5.
The formyl peptide receptor (FPR) and the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-linked type III receptor for the Fc portion of IgG (Fc gamma RIIIB; CD16) play important roles in various inflammatory responses in human neutrophils. The mechanisms of signaling by the glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-anchored Fc gamma RIIIB are not known. Therefore, we investigated the possibility that Fc gamma RIIIB and FPR may act in concert to mediate neutrophil functions. We observed that pretreatment of normal human neutrophils with Fab fragments of a mAb to the Fc gamma RIII (3G8) specifically inhibited their chemotaxis into micropore filters in response to the formylated peptides FMLP or formyl-norleucyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. Pretreatment of neutrophils with a saturating concentration of 3G8 Fab (100 nM or 5 micrograms/ml) followed by exposure to FMLP (0.5 to 500 nM) indicated that significant inhibition of chemotaxis was observed at peptide concentrations greater than 5 nM. However, 3G8 Fab had no effect on the neutrophil response to a wide range (0.05 to 500 nM) of other chemotactic factors, including C5a, leukotriene B4, IL-8 (neutrophil-activating peptide-1), and platelet-activating factor. Moreover, pretreatment of neutrophils with mAb to other cell surface molecules (decay-accelerating factor, Fc gamma RII, and HLA class I) did not affect chemotaxis to FMLP. Inhibition of movement was not due to degradation of FMLP by the cell surface endopeptidase 24.11 (CD10), because neutrophils pretreated with the CD10 inhibitor phosphoramidone and 3G8 Fab displayed the same altered response to FMLP as cells pretreated with 3G8 Fab alone. Ligation of the Fc binding site of Fc gamma RIIIB appears to be essential for altering the FMLP-induced response, since soluble aggregated IgG and other anti-Fc gamma RIII antibodies, all of which recognize the ligand binding site, mimic the inhibitory effect of the 3G8 Fab on FMLP-induced chemotaxis. In contrast, a mAb (214.1) that does not recognize the Fc binding site of Fc gamma RIIIB had no effect on FMLP-induced chemotaxis. Not only did anti-Fc gamma RIII inhibit neutrophil chemotaxis to FMLP in a filter-based migration assay, but 3G8 Fab also inhibited FMLP-induced neutrophil transendothelial migration. Scatchard plot analysis of radioligand binding experiments indicated that 3G8 Fab did not significantly alter the number of FMLP binding sites on neutrophils but significantly increased the affinity of the FPR for [3H]FMLP. Removal of greater than 80% of cell surface Fc gamma RIIIB by phospholipase C abolished the neutrophil chemotactic response to FMLP but did not affect movement toward C5a, IL-8, or leukotriene B4.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) modulates the function of mature neutrophils by priming for enhanced chemotaxis and oxidative metabolism in response to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (f-Met-Leu-Phe). Our studies establish a relationship between f-Met-Leu-Phe receptor number and affinity and neutrophil chemotaxis and oxidative metabolism. A brief (5- to 15-min) exposure to physiologic concentrations of GM-CSF (10 pM to 100 pM) enhances f-Met-Leu-Phe-induced neutrophil chemotaxis by 85%, correlating with a rapid threefold increase (46,000/cell to 150,000/cell) in high-affinity neutrophil f-Met-Leu-Phe receptors. More prolonged incubation (1 to 2 hr) of neutrophils with GM-CSF is accompanied by a change to low-affinity f-Met-Leu-Phe receptors (Kd = 29 nM to Kd = 99 nM) concomitant with priming for enhanced neutrophil oxidative metabolism. Moreover, enhanced chemotactic responses to f-Met-Leu-Phe are no longer evident after more prolonged incubation of neutrophils with GM-CSF. These results show that a single lymphokine (GM-CSF) induces sequential changes in neutrophil f-Met-Leu-Phe receptor number and affinity that may enhance different physiologic responses.  相似文献   

7.
Distribution and modulation of a human leukemia-associated antigen (CALLA)   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
CALLA is a 100,000-dalton surface glycoprotein expressed by malignant cells of patients with clinically important subtypes of acute leukemia. Incubation of human leukemic cells expressing CALLA with specific monoclonal antibody (J5) at 37 degrees C causes rapid and selective internalization and degradation of this antigen (antigenic modulation). In these studies we show that CALLA-specific monoclonal antibodies also identify a cell surface glycoprotein having a m. w. of approximately 100,000 on 2 to 6% of nonmyeloid nucleated cells of normal adult bone marrow, on normal fibroblasts in tissue culture, and on cells of several nonhematopoietic human tumor cell lines. J5 antibody similarly modulates the surface expression of CALLA on nonleukemic cell populations, although the extent of modulation at a given concentration of antibody varied considerably. Modulation was almost complete for CALLA on cells of normal bone marrow, but was highly variable for cells of nonhematopoietic cell lines, possibly reflecting variability in antibody access to surface antigen. Using fluoresceinated or iodinated J5 antibody to modulate expression of CALLA on cells of leukemic cell lines, we show that antibody-antigen complexes undergo a temperature-dependent redistribution on the cell surface during modulation to form microaggregates. Antibody as well as antigen is then internalized. Studies of [35S]methionine-labeled cells indicate that synthesis of CALLA continues despite modulation of its surface expression by specific antibody, implying that the presence of CALLA on the cell surface reflects a dynamic equilibrium between the processes of surface expression of newly synthesized glycoprotein and its spontaneous and antibody-mediated clearance. The implications of these observations for immunotherapy are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
CD157 is a GPI-anchored cell surface glycoprotein expressed by human peripheral blood neutrophils. Cross-linking of CD157 induces intracellular Ca2+ mobilization and re-shaping in neutrophils, thus regulating their adhesive and migratory properties. Results obtained by immunolocalization and confocal microscopy indicate that CD157 lies in close proximity to the CD11b/CD18 complex which is strongly expressed on the activated neutrophil cell membrane where it plays a predominant role in adhesion. This study analyses the physical association between CD157 and CD18 in human neutrophils by co-immunoprecipitation experiments. The anti-CD157 monoclonal antibody RF3 co-precipitates CD18, and the anti-CD18 antibody TS1/18 co-precipitates CD157 from human neutrophil lysates. These results confirm that CD157 physically interacts with CD11b/CD18 complex in human neutrophils.  相似文献   

9.
A variety of monoclonal antibodies has been used to study the roles of surface proteins in neutrophil function. Many monoclonal antibodies that bind to human neutrophils react with the oligosaccharide lacto-N-fucopentaose III. Sequential immunoprecipitation of radiolabeled proteins from extracts of neutrophils labeled at the cell surface with 125I, and partial proteolysis peptide mapping studies were used to compare the proteins recognized by several widely used monoclonal antibodies that react with human neutrophils. The monoclonal antibodies that react with lacto-N-fucopentaose III (CD15) immunoprecipitated five distinct neutrophil surface proteins. The data indicate that CD15 monoclonal antibodies react with a subset of the LFA-1/HMac-1/gp 150,95 glycoprotein family as well as with CR1 on human neutrophils. The CD15 antibodies studied differed in their avidities for these proteins. The molecules immunoprecipitated by the CD15 antibodies tested were more resistant to proteolysis than the homologous proteins immunoprecipitated by the other monoclonal antibodies studied that react directly with the alpha M (CD11) or beta (CD18) chains of the LFA-1/HMac-1/gp 150,95 glycoprotein family. Some of the differences in antibody reactivity and protease sensitivity of the membrane proteins recognized by these antibodies may be due to differences in glycosylation. The data suggest that the antibodies studied can detect differences in post-translational modification among copies of certain surface proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Neutrophils have been implicated in the pathogenesis of many inflammatory lung diseases, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma. With this study, we investigated how disruption of cAMP signaling impacts the function of neutrophil recruitment to the lung. Four genes code for type 4 phosphodiesterases (PDE4s), enzymes critical for regulation of cAMP levels and cell signaling. Ablation of two of these genes, PDE4B and PDE4D, but not PDE4A, has profound effects on neutrophil function. In a paradigm of mouse lung injury induced by endotoxin inhalation, the number of neutrophils recovered in the bronchoalveolar lavage was markedly decreased in PDE4D(-/-) and PDE4B(-/-) mice 4 and 24 h after exposure to LPS. Acute PDE4 inhibition with rolipram had additional inhibitory effects on neutrophil migration in PDE4B(-/-) and, to a lesser extent, PDE4D(-/-) mice. This decreased neutrophil recruitment occurred without major changes in chemokine accumulation in bronchoalveolar lavage, suggesting a dysfunction intrinsic to neutrophils. This hypothesis was confirmed by investigating the expression of adhesion molecules on the surface of neutrophils and chemotaxis in vitro. CD18 expression was decreased after ablation of both PDE4B and PDE4D, whereas CD11 expression was not significantly affected. Chemotaxis in response to KC and macrophage inflammatory protein-2 was markedly reduced in PDE4B(-/-) and PDE4D(-/-) neutrophils. The effect of PDE4 ablation on chemotaxis was comparable, but not additive, to the effects of acute PDE4 inhibition with rolipram. These data demonstrate that PDE4B and PDE4D play complementary, but not redundant, roles in the control of neutrophil function.  相似文献   

11.
Surfactant protein A (SP-A), a pulmonary lectin, plays an important role in regulating innate immune cell function. Besides accelerating pathogen clearance by pulmonary phagocytes, SP-A also stimulates alveolar macrophage chemotaxis and directed actin polymerization. We hypothesized that SP-A would also stimulate neutrophil chemotaxis. With the use of a Boyden chamber assay, we found that SP-A (0.5-25 microg/ml) did not stimulate chemotaxis of rat peripheral neutrophils or inflammatory bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) neutrophils isolated from LPS-treated lungs. However, SP-A affected neutrophil chemotaxis toward the bacterial peptide formyl-met-leu-phe (fMLP). Surprisingly, the effect was different for the two neutrophil populations: SP-A reduced peripheral neutrophil chemotaxis toward fMLP (49 +/- 5% fMLP alone) and enhanced inflammatory BAL neutrophil chemotaxis (277 +/- 48% fMLP alone). This differential effect was not seen for the homologous proteins mannose binding lectin and complement protein 1q but was recapitulated by type IV collagen. SP-A bound both neutrophil populations comparably and did not alter formyl peptide binding. These data support a role for SP-A in regulating neutrophil migration in pulmonary tissue.  相似文献   

12.
The adhesion of neutrophils to endothelial cells is a central event leading to diapedesis and involves the binding of the I-domain of beta(2) integrins (CD11/CD18) to endothelial ICAMs. In addition to the I-domain, the beta(2) integrin complement receptor 3 (CR3) (CD11b/CD18) contains a lectin-like domain (LLD) that can alter leukocyte functions such as chemotaxis and cytotoxicity. The present study demonstrates that, in contrast to the CR3 I-domain, Ab blockade of the CR3 LLD has no role in mediating neutrophil-induced loss of endothelial barrier function. However, activation of CR3 with the LLD agonist beta-glucan protects the barrier function of endothelial cells in the presence of activated neutrophils and reduces transendothelial migration without affecting adhesion of the neutrophils to the endothelium. The LLD site-specific mAb VIM12 obviates beta-glucan protection while activation of the LLD by VIM12 cross-linking mimics the beta-glucan response by both preserving endothelial barrier function and reducing neutrophil transendothelial migration. beta-glucan has no direct effect on endothelial cell function in the absence of activated neutrophils. These findings demonstrate that signaling through the CR3 LLD prevents neutrophil-induced loss of endothelial barrier function and reduces diapedesis. This suggests that the LLD may be a suitable target for oligosaccharide-based anti-inflammatory therapeutics.  相似文献   

13.
The occurrence of neutrophils at the pannus‐cartilage border is an important phenomenon for understanding the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are predominant enzymes responsible for the cartilage degradation. The present article studied the expression of CD147 on neutrophils and its potential role in neutrophil chemotaxis, MMPs production and the invasiveness of fibroblast‐like synoviocytes (FLS). The results of flow cytometry revealed that the mean fluorescence intensity of CD147 expression on neutrophils of peripheral blood from RA patients was higher than that in healthy individual. The potential role of CD147 in cyclophilin A (CyPA)‐mediated cell migration was studied using chemotaxis assay and it was found that the addition of anti‐CD147 antibody significantly decreased the chemotactic index of the neutrophils. Significantly elevated release and activation of MMPs were seen in the co‐culture of neutrophil and FLS compared with cultures of the cells alone. An increased number of cells invading through the filters in the invasion assays were also observed in the co‐cultured cells. The addition of anti‐CD147 antibody had some inhibitory effect, not only on MMP production but also on cell invasion in the co‐culture model. Our study demonstrates that the increased expression of CD147 on neutrophils in RA may be responsible for CyPA‐mediated neutrophil migration into the joints, elevated MMPs secretion and cell invasion of synoviocytes, all of which may contribute to the cartilage invasion and bone destruction of RA. Better knowledge of these findings will hopefully provide a new insight into the pathogenesis of RA.  相似文献   

14.
The vitamin D binding protein (DBP) is a plasma protein that significantly enhances the chemotactic activity of C5a and C5a(desArg) (cochemotactic activity). The objective of this study was to investigate how DBP mediates this process using neutrophils and U937 cells transfected with the C5a receptor (U937-C5aR cells) and comparing chemotaxis to C-activated serum (DBP dependent) vs purified C5a (DBP independent). Binding to the cell surface is essential for this protein to function as a chemotactic cofactor, and DBP binds to a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CSPG) on neutrophil plasma membrane preparations. To determine whether a CSPG also functions to mediate cochemotactic activity, U937-C5aR cells were grown in chlorate to inhibit CSPG sulfation or treated with chondroitinase AC. Either treatment significantly inhibited chemotaxis only to C-activated serum. CD44 is a major cell surface CSPG on leukocytes, and functions to facilitate chemotaxis. Treatment of cells with anti-CD44 blocks chemotaxis of neutrophils and U937-C5aR cells to C-activated serum but not purified C5a. DBP binds to CD44 on the cell surface as evidenced by coimmunoprecipitation, confocal microscopy, and cell binding studies. Annexin A2 associates with CD44 in lipid rafts; therefore, its potential role in mediating cochemotactic activity was investigated. Results demonstrate that anti-A2 inhibits neutrophil and U937-C5aR chemotaxis specifically to C-activated serum, blocks DBP binding to cells, and colocalizes with anti-DBP on the cell surface. These results provide clear evidence that CD44 and annexin A2 mediate the C5a chemotactic cofactor function of DBP.  相似文献   

15.
Native C-reactive protein (CRP) is a planar pentamer of identical subunits expressed at high serum levels during the acute phase of inflammation. At inflammatory sites, an isomeric form termed modified CRP (mCRP) is expressed and reveals neoantigenic epitopes associated with modified monomeric CRP subunits. mCRP cannot assume the native pentameric conformation but rather forms a nonpentameric aggregate of monomers. While native CRP inhibits neutrophil movement in vitro and in vivo, the effect of mCRP on neutrophil movement has not been reported. To model the biological function and biochemical interaction of mCRP on neutrophils, in vitro chemotaxis and binding experiments were performed using mCRP. Reported here, mCRP effectively inhibited fMLP-induced chemotaxis similar to native CRP. Additionally, mCRP increased binding of labeled native CRP to neutrophils. This increased binding occurred by direct protein-protein interaction of the C-terminus thereby implicating the CRP(199-206) sequence. Binding of mCRP to neutrophils was blocked by anti-CD16 monoclonal antibody whereas native CRP was not. These results suggest that modified forms of CRP inhibit chemotaxis, a function similar to native CRP, but that mCRP and native molecule bind different receptors on human neutrophils.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Kinhult J  Egesten A  Uddman R  Cardell LO 《Peptides》2002,23(10):1735-1739
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide (PACAP) is a neuropeptide with strong bronchodilator capacity, present in the human airways. There is recent evidence that PACAP decreases the release of proinflammatory cytokines. We have previously shown that PACAP inhibits neutrophil chemotaxis, but altogether little is known about the effects of PACAP on granulocytes. The present study was designed to investigate if PACAP and the closely related peptide vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) could affect the cell surface expression of CD11b, CD63 and CD66b in human neutrophils. Neutrophils isolated from 12 healthy blood donors were incubated with either PACAP or VIP, and the expression of neutrophil cell surface markers was assessed using flowcytometry. Neutrophils incubated with PACAP38 exhibited a marked, concentration-dependent increase in their expression of CD11b, CD63 and CD66b. In contrast, neutrophils incubated with VIP showed no increase of the investigated surface markers. This indicates a role for PACAP in granulocyte activation, mediated via a pathway not shared with VIP. Together with the previously presented data on leukocyte migration it suggests that PACAP acts as a regulator of neutrophil inflammation.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
It has previously been shown that during degranulation Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18)--a glycoprotein that plays a central role in neutrophil adhesion-is up-regulated on PMN surfaces. It has been assumed that this quantitative change in adhesion Ag expression on the cell surface would in turn lead to increased cellular adhesiveness. In contrast, we found that at an incubation temperature of 16 degrees C, stimulated neutrophil adhesion to plastic tissue culture dishes in the presence of FMLP (2.5 x 10(-6) M), TNF (10 ng/ml), or PAF (1 x 10(-4) M) occurred without cellular degranulation or Mac-1 surface up-regulation as measured cytofluorometrically. As shown by functional inhibition studies employing monoclonal antibodies 60.3 (anti-CD18) and 60.1 (anti-CD11b), adhesion at 16 degrees C, where no CD11b/CD18 up-regulation was seen, is mediated by CD11b/CD18 just as it is at 37 degrees C, where degranulation and CD11b/CD18 up-regulation could be demonstrated. The physiologic importance of these findings was underscored by experiments done on endothelial monolayers, which showed that PMN association with endothelial cells is absolutely independent from the quantitative up-regulation of Mac-1 on PMN surfaces. When neutrophils were stimulated at 37 degrees C by endotoxin, an agent that does not induce aggregation (a form of intercellular adhesion), Mac-1 surface expression increased only after cells had become adherent, whereas cells held in suspension to prevent cell-substrate adhesion neither degranulated nor up-regulated their Mac-1 surface expression. Thus, not only is adherence independent of degranulation and Mac-1 cell surface up-regulation, but both degranulation and Mac-1 surface up-regulation appear to depend on the process of adhesion. Correspondingly, incubation of neutrophils with antibodies 60.1 and 60.3 inhibited not only adhesion of cells stimulated with FMLP at 37 degrees C but degranulation as well. These results indicate that Mac-1 influences degranulation as well as it controls adhesion not by its mere quantity on the cell surface, but rather by an yet undefined molecular modulation.  相似文献   

20.
FcgammaRIIIb (CD16) is a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored low-affinity IgG receptor, exclusively expressed on human neutrophils. FcgammaRIIIb associates with complement receptor 3 (CR3, Mac-1, CD11b/CD18), which may indirectly link FcgammaRIIIb to the actin cytoskeleton. Upon neutrophil activation, apoptosis, or chemotaxis, FcgammaRIIIb is shed from the cell surface. In all of these events, actin rearrangements play an important role. To establish a role for the actin cytoskeleton in the control of FcgammaRIIIb shedding, we treated human neutrophils with jasplakinolide, an actin-polymerizing peptide. We show that enhanced actin polymerization induces time- and dose-dependent shedding of FcgammaRIIIb. This effect was not restricted to FcgammaRIIIb, because the cell surface expression of CD43, CD44, and L-selectin was also downregulated after induction of actin polymerization. This actin-dependent pathway is staurosporine sensitive but does not appear to involve activation of PKC or CR3. These data show that the actin cytoskeleton can regulate protein ectodomain shedding from human neutrophils.  相似文献   

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