Visualization of cholecystokinin receptors on a subset of human monocytes and in rat spleen |
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Authors: | P Sacerdote C J Wiedermann L M Wahl C B Pert M R Ruff |
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Institution: | Section on Brain Biochemistry, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892. |
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Abstract: | Direct radioreceptor binding experiments and Scatchard analysis reveal CCK receptors on elutriator purified human peripheral blood monocytes, but not on purified human T cells. The monocyte receptors have a single class of high (0.1 nM) affinity binding sites. A structure-function analysis of monocyte binding by different CCK analogs correlates well with previously demonstrated chemotactic responses in monocytes and receptors in brain tissue. Biochemical cross-linking indicates that the monocyte CCK recognition molecule is comparable in molecular size to that in brain membranes. Utilizing a novel fluoresceinated Texas Red-CCK conjugate we have visualized that up to 20% of human peripheral monocytes bear receptors for CCK. A discrete and anatomically significant distribution of CCK receptors in rat spleen is shown by film autoradiography of tissue sections. A more detailed microscopic analysis identifies a dendritic population of monocyte-derived cells within the periarteriolar lymphocyte sheath (PALS) of the white pulp as the CCK receptor-bearing cell in spleen. The anatomical localization of receptor-bearing cells within the PALS region suggests a role for CCK in the antigen processing and sensitization phases of the immune response via regulatory effects of this peptide on a specific, local macrophage-related cell population. |
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