Hydroxyl radical production by stimulated neutrophils reappraised |
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Authors: | A Samuni C D Black C M Krishna H L Malech E F Bernstein A Russo |
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Affiliation: | Radiation Oncology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland. |
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Abstract: | Release of active oxygen species during the human neutrophil respiratory burst is thought to be mandatory for effective defense against bacterial infections and may play an important role in damage to host tissues. Part of the critical bacterial and host tissue damage has been attributed to hydroxyl radicals produced from superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. Because of the short life time of the very reactive hydroxyl radical, direct study of hydroxyl radical production is not possible; therefore, indirect detection methods such as electron spin resonance (ESR) coupled with appropriate spin-trapping agents such as 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) have been used. Superoxide production during the oxidative burst has been unambiguously demonstrated. Recent reports claim that hydroxyl radicals are not made during neutrophil stimulation and offer as an explanation the presence of granular components that interfere with hydroxyl radical production. When using the spin-trap agent DMPO, absence of the relatively long-lived adducts DMPO-OH and DMPO-CH3 has been assumed to be prima facie evidence for lack of hydroxyl radical participation. We show that high superoxide flux produced during stimulation of human neutrophils rapidly destroys both DMPO-OH and DMPO-CH3. In accord with previous implications, our results provide an alternative explanation for the absence of .OH adduct in spin-trapping studies and corroborate results obtained using other methods that implicate hydroxyl radical production during neutrophil stimulation. |
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