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Query: EC:1.6.3.1 (
NADPH oxidase
)
11,281
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In HL-60 and ML-3 human myeloid cell lines, gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) and/or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) induce synergistic accumulation of transcripts of the genes encoding the heavy chain (gp91-phox) of cytochrome b558 and the cytosolic factors p47-phox and p67-phox, components of the superoxide-generating
NADPH oxidase
system. The accumulation of transcripts for gp91-phox and p47-phox, as quantitated at the single-cell level by in situ hybridization, is extremely heterogeneous; however, when the cells are stimulated by IFN-gamma and TNF together, most or all the cells in the induced cultures express higher accumulation of gp91-phox and p47-phox transcripts than cells from uninduced culture. In situ hybridization was performed on cellular subsets separated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting on the basis of surface expression of differentiation antigens or respiratory burst activity. The accumulation of gp91-phox and p47-phox transcripts correlated positively with the expression of the CD14 and
CD11b
antigens, two markers expressed on mature myelomonocytic cells. Similarly, accumulation of the two transcripts correlated with respiratory burst activity in cells separated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting after being loaded with dichlorofluorescein diacetate and stimulated with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. These results suggest that all the cells in the culture are induced to differentiate by TNF and IFN-gamma but that at the time of analysis there is heterogeneity in the level of differentiation and a proportion of cells is present that shows more mature characteristics with a coordinate expression of the various differentiation markers and functions.
...
PMID:Induction of expression of genes encoding components of the respiratory burst oxidase during differentiation of human myeloid cell lines induced by tumor necrosis factor and gamma-interferon. 156 22
Neutrophil research relies largely on studies with highly purified cells. Yet the isolation procedures induce changes in surface expression of several proteins. We used a large panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) to characterize in detail the phenotypic changes during isolation and stimulation of human neutrophils. Centrifugation on density gradients appears to be the crucial step that causes an increase in expression of antigens not detectable on neutrophils in whole blood samples (cytochrome b558 recognized by MoAb 7D5; and CD10) or expressed at significantly lower levels (CD11a,
CD11b
, CD11c, CD13, CD16, CD45, and CD67). Other antigens were unaffected by the density gradient centrifugation step (CD32, CD54, CD58, Leu-8, HLA class I). Upregulation of antigens was also determined by stimulation of purified neutrophils. Upregulation of CD63 was an excellent marker for release from azurophil granules. We subsequently related the surface antigen expression to functional activities of purified neutrophils. From these experiments, we concluded that 7D5-as "early activation" marker--does not necessarily discriminate between primed or resting neutrophils with respect to
NADPH oxidase
activity.
...
PMID:Membrane surface antigen expression on neutrophils: a reappraisal of the use of surface markers for neutrophil activation. 190 73
Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA, 10(-7) M) activation of adherent neutrophils (PMNs) led to a markedly attenuated release of superoxide anion (O2-) per cell when PMNs were activated at high density (2.85 fmol O2-/PMN at 2 million in 0.1 ml) in comparison with cells activated at low cell density (12.0 fmol O2-/PMN at 250,000 in 0.1 ml). This "autoregulatory" phenomenon was not due to a defect in the superoxide anion assay employed, to a differential adherence of neutrophils at high vs. low density, or to substrate (cytochrome c) or cell stimulus (PMA) limitation. It was associated with an inhibition of apparent
NADPH oxidase
activity and a leftward shift (toward a lower level of activation) in the activation profile of PMNs (as determined by FACS analysis using PMNs preloaded with 2'7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate in which H2O2 production results in the production of the fluorescent product 2'7'-dichlorofluorescein intracellularly). Other aspects of the neutrophil activation response including arachidonic acid mobilization, phospholipid metabolism, and perhaps phosphatidylinositol turnover were also attenuated when PMNs were activated at high cell density. Studies with cells in solution, cells treated with cycloheximide, and cells treated with 4,4'-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid suggest that PMN contact with a surface, neutrophil protein synthesis, and an increased surface expression of the heterodimer
CD11b
/CD18 on PMNs all were not required for autoregulation. Finally, morphometric and morphologic examination of PMNs activated at low vs. high density revealed histologic and structural correlates associated with the attenuated PMN activation response of cells triggered at high cell density. We conclude that multiple structural and functional aspects of the PMN activation response are modulated by cell density and suggest that this property is important both in the physiologic control of neutrophil activation and in the design of in vitro assays of the neutrophil activation response.
...
PMID:"Autoregulation" of human neutrophil activation in vitro: regulation of phorbol myristate acetate-induced neutrophil activation by cell density. 215 15
Peritoneal dialysis effluent from patients with end-stage renal failure contains a low-molecular-weight solute that inhibits the killing of phagocytosed Staphylococcus epidermidis by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN). This observation has been investigated by using luciginen-enhanced chemiluminescence to measure PMN
NADPH oxidase
activity,
CD11b
/CD18 expression and lactoferrin release to measure secondary granule discharge, and cellular levels of beta-glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31) to measure changes in primary granules. Peritoneal dialysis effluent had no effect on the loss of intracellular beta-glucuronidase from normal unstimulated PMN or from PMN stimulated with S. epidermidis. It did, however, cause a concentration-dependent (0 to 70%; vol/vol) increase in expression of
CD11b
/CD18 and
NADPH oxidase
activity.
CD11b
/CD18 expression increased over 20 min before starting to plateau. Release of lactoferrin by the same cells demonstrated a strong positive correlation with integrin expression (P < 0.001, Spearman's rank correlation coefficient). When dialysis effluent-treated PMN were stimulated with formyl-methionylleucylphenylalanine, integrin expression, release of lactoferrin, and
NADPH oxidase
activity were greater than in PMN treated with formyl-methionylleucylphenylalanine alone. Under these conditions, a concentration-dependent increase in
CD11b
/ CD18 and lactoferrin release were observed only at a concentration between 0 and 30% (vol/vol) dialysis effluent, while a concentration-dependent increase in oxidase activity was seen at a concentration between 0 and 70% (vol/vol). The results suggest that dialysis effluent does not affect PMN primary granule release but does cause increased release of secondary granules and an increase in
NADPH oxidase
activity in both unstimulated and stimulated PMN.
...
PMID:Primary and secondary granule release by polymorphonuclear leukocytes exposed to peritoneal dialysis effluent. 749 50
Neutrophils contain a multicomponent
NADPH oxidase
system that is involved in the production of microbicidal oxidants. Stimulation of human neutrophils with the peptide FMLP activates this respiratory burst enzyme to produce superoxide and also has been shown to result in activation of phosphatidylinositol (Ptdlns) 3-kinase. Treatment of human neutrophils with 2-(4-morpholinyl)-8-phenyl-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one (LY294002), a potent and specific inhibitor of Ptdlns 3-kinase, resulted in complete inhibition of Ptdlns 3-kinase activity as well as in inhibition of superoxide production in FMLP-treated neutrophils in suspension; FMLP-stimulated oxidant production in adherent cells was also abolished. Treatment of human neutrophils with PMA resulted in production of superoxide without activation of Ptdlns 3-kinase; LY294002 did not block superoxide production in neutrophils exposed to PMA. In addition, LY294002 did not inhibit cellfree
NADPH oxidase
activation,
CD11b
-dependent adhesion, actin polymerization in response to FMLP, or FMLP-induced calcium flux. These results suggest that the signal transduction pathway of the FMLP-receptor involves activation of Ptdlns 3-kinase, which is required for subsequent superoxide production induced by the chemotactic peptide. Furthermore, Ptdlns 3-kinase may be located directly upstream of protein kinase C or other protein kinases, which in turn activate the
NADPH oxidase
system.
...
PMID:Investigation of neutrophil signal transduction using a specific inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. 786 7
Stimulation of the respiratory burst of human neutrophils by fMet-Leu-Phe (in the absence of cytochalasin B) is largely unaffected when the activities of protein kinase C and phospholipase D are inhibited. This has been confirmed using three separate assays to measure the respiratory burst. However, whilst these enzymes are not required for the initiation or maximal rate of oxidant generation, they are required to sustain oxidase activity. In contrast, in the presence of cytochalasin B, fMet-Leu-Phe stimulated oxidase activity is much more dependent on phospholipase D activity. It is proposed that (in the absence of cytochalasin B) activation of the
NADPH oxidase
utilises cytochrome b molecules that are already present on the plasma membrane and activation occurs independently of phospholipase D and protein kinase C. Once these complexes are inactivated, then new cytochrome b molecules must be recruited from sub-cellular stores. This translocation and/or activation of these molecules is phospholipase D dependent. Some support for this model comes from the finding that the translocation of
CD11b
(which co-localises with cytochrome b) onto the cell surface is phospholipase D dependent.
...
PMID:Phospholipase D-dependent and -independent activation of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase. 794 74
Exposure of neutrophils to agents such as lipopolysaccharide, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor causes a major upregulation of subsequent agonist-induced
NADPH oxidase
activation. This priming effect is a prerequisite for neutrophil-mediated tissue damage and has been widely considered to be an irreversible process. We have investigated the potential for neutrophils to recover from a priming stimulus by studying the effects of platelet-activating factor (PAF). PAF did not stimulate respiratory burst activity directly, but caused a rapid (maximal at 10 minutes) and concentration-dependent (EC50 50.2 nmol/L) increase in N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP)-stimulated superoxide anion release. At time-points > 10 minutes, this priming effect spontaneously declined, with return to basal levels of fMLP-stimulated superoxide anion generation by 120 minutes. An identical priming time-course was observed with N-methyl carbamyl PAF, a nonmetabolizable analogue of PAF, indicating that the transient nature of PAF-induced priming was not secondary to PAF metabolism. Two structurally diverse PAF receptor antagonists (UK-74,505 and WEB 2086), added 10 minutes after PAF addition, increased the rate of decay of the priming effect. In contrast, TNF-alpha-induced priming, which was of a similar magnitude to that observed for PAF, was slower to evolve (maximal at 30 minutes) and remained constant for at least 120 minutes. The reversible nature of PAF-induced priming was confirmed by demonstrating that PAF-, but not TNF-alpha-, induced cell polarization (shape change) and
CD11b
-dependent neutrophil binding of albumin-coated latex beads was also transient, with return to basal, unstimulated levels by 120 minutes. Furthermore, cells that had spontaneously deprimed following PAF exposure retained their capacity to be fully reprimed by a subsequent addition of either PAF or TNF-alpha. These data imply that neutrophil priming is not an irreversible event: the demonstration of a cycle of complete priming, depriming, and repriming offers the potential for functional recycling of neutrophils at sites of inflammation.
...
PMID:Demonstration of reversible priming of human neutrophils using platelet-activating factor. 894 70
In mice selectively deficient in
CD11b
/CD18, a beta 2 integrin, chemoattractant-induced leukocyte adhesion to microvascular endothelium in vivo was reduced. Paradoxically, thioglycollate-induced neutrophil accumulation in the peritoneal cavity was increased and was associated with a significant delay in apoptosis of extravasated cells. The extravasated cells had a near absence of neutrophil phagocytosis and a reduction in oxygen free radical generation, which may contribute to the observed defect in apoptosis. This is supported by our in vitro studies, in which phagocytosis of opsonized particles by human neutrophils rapidly induced apoptosis that could be blocked with
CD11b
/ CD18 antibodies. Reactive oxygen species are the intracellular link in this process: phagocytosis-induced apoptosis was blocked both in neutrophils treated with the flavoprotein inhibitor diphenylene iodonium and in neutrophils from patients with chronic granulomatous disease, which lack
NADPH oxidase
. Thus,
CD11b
/CD18 plays a novel and unsuspected homeostatic role in inflammation by accelerating the programmed elimination of extravasated neutrophils.
...
PMID:A novel role for the beta 2 integrin CD11b/CD18 in neutrophil apoptosis: a homeostatic mechanism in inflammation. 898 23
Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) and their metabolites play important roles in a variety of biological processes. We have previously reported that lactosylceramide (LacCer), a ubiquitous GSL, stimulates
NADPH oxidase
-dependent superoxide generation by aortic smooth muscle cells and their consequent proliferation. We postulated that LacCer may upregulate adhesion molecules on human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (hPMNs), perhaps also via
NADPH oxidase
-dependent reactive oxygen metabolite (ROM) generation. Incubation of hPMNs with LacCer upregulated
CD11b
/CD18 (Mac-1) and CD11c/CD18, as determined by fluorescence-automated cell sorting. LacCer also stimulated these hPMNs to generate superoxide via
NADPH oxidase
, as determined by lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence. However, the upregulation of Mac-1 by LacCer did not itself appear to be mediated by ROMs, since neither an antioxidant nor an
NADPH oxidase
inhibitor substantially inhibited the Mac-1 upregulation. However, this Mac-1 upregulation was significantly inhibited by two disparate phospholipase A2 (PLA2) inhibitors. Moreover, LacCer induced arachidonic acid metabolism, which was inhibited by the PLA2 inhibitors, but not by an
NADPH oxidase
inhibitor. To evaluate the effect of LacCer on hPMN adhesion to endothelium, hPMNs stimulated with LacCer were allowed to adhere to unstimulated human endothelial cell monolayers. LacCer stimulated hPMN adhesion to endothelial cells, which was blocked by anti-CD18 and by the PLA2 inhibitors. We conclude that LacCer stimulates both Mac-1 upregulation and superoxide generation in hPMNs but that ROMs are not the upstream signal for Mac-1 upregulation. This mechanism may well be relevant to acute endothelial injury in inflammation and other pathological conditions.
...
PMID:Lactosylceramide stimulates human neutrophils to upregulate Mac-1, adhere to endothelium, and generate reactive oxygen metabolites in vitro. 952 58
A monoclonal IgM, specifically recognizing both
CD11b
and CD18 of human neutrophils, was used to examine the organization and mobility of
CD11b
/CD18 in the plasma membrane of human neutrophils degranulated by dihydrocytochalasin B (dhCB) treatment and fMet-Leu-Phe (fMLF) stimulation. Subcellular fractionation analysis of untreated or dhCB-treated control neutrophils indicated that 20% of
CD11b
/CD18 cosedimented with plasma membrane and the remainder with specific granules. In contrast, fMLF stimulation of dhCB-treated cells caused a major reorganization of
CD11b
/CD18, in which 60-70% of
CD11b
/CD18 sedimented in dense plasma membrane fractions that were also enriched in superoxide-generating
NADPH oxidase
activity. Similarly pretreated neutrophils were fixed, immunogold labeled, and examined by scanning electron microscopy. Immunogold particles were distributed uniformly over the symmetrically ruffled surface of unstimulated neutrophils. On dhCB-treated cells, immunogold was mostly uniformly distributed on a smooth membrane with a small percentage of particles lining up into linear arrays. After fMLF + dhCB stimulation,
CD11b
/CD18 gold label was more abundant on the cell surface and formed large aggregates on polarized membrane protrusions. However, when cells were adhered to an albumin-coated quartz surface and stimulated with fMLF in the presence of dhCB, immunogold was excluded on the articulated and rounded cell body but concentrated on the periphery of adherent lamellae. Fluorescence photobleaching recovery indicated that in unstimulated cells 38 +/- 3% of
CD11b
/CD18 was mobile (R) with a diffusion constant D of 3.1 +/- 0.3 x 10(-10) cm2/s. Treatment with dhCB raised R and D 24 and 74%, respectively. Stimulation using 1 microM fMLF with dhCB lowered D and R to near control levels. Since
NADPH oxidase
and
CD11b
/CD18 cosediment in high-density plasma membrane domains after fMLF + dhCB stimulation, we speculate that a stimulus-induced reorganization of
CD11b
/CD18 and
NADPH oxidase
to common membrane domains may occur in fMLF + dhCB-degranulated neutrophils.
...
PMID:Organization and mobility of CD11b/CD18 and targeting of superoxide on the surface of degranulated human neutrophils. 972 Nov 96
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