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A novel eicosanoid is the major arachidonic acid metabolite of cultured human monocytes
Authors:M E Goldyne  G F Burrish  C Oliver
Abstract:Human peripheral blood monocyte-macrophages (M phi) generate a novel eicosanoid during in vitro culture. The metabolite is generated during incubation of the cells with 14C - arachidonic acid (AA). Lack of prior recognition of this metabolite probably results from the facts that: 1) on thin-layer chromatography (TLC) in two standard solvent systems, the novel metabolite co-chromatographed with either prostaglandin D2 or thromboxane B2, and 2) its generation, under the conditions studied, does not occur until between 90 and 180 minutes after culture initiation which is a time period beyond that used for most leukocyte studies. The generation of the metabolite is inhibited by nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) but not by indomethacin. Base hydrolysis did not alter its migration on TLC. On both reversed phase and straight phase high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), the novel peak isolated by TLC elutes as a single major peak of radioactivity with a retention time different from the known leukotrienes, hydroxy acids, or their metabolites. Furthermore, the peak isolated on HPLC has a single ultraviolet absorption maximum at 270 nm. M phi cultured for 1 week prior to a 24 hour incubation with 14C-AA generated proportionally less of the novel eicosanoid (roughly 68% of total radiolabeled product) than did M phi cultured for 3 weeks prior to a similar incubation with 14C-AA (roughly 86% of total radiolabeled product). Under the conditions studied, the novel eicosanoid is the major AA metabolite generated from exogenous AA by cultured M phi and it appears to be generated in increasing quantity as the M phi differentiate.
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