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Query: UNIPROT:P04141 (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor)
6,790 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although serum concentrations of ascorbic acid seldom exceed 150 micromol/L, mature neutrophils and mononuclear phagocytes accumulate millimolar concentrations of vitamin C. Relatively little is known about the mechanisms regulating this process. The colony-stimulating factors (CSFs), which are central modulators of the production, maturation, and function of human granulocytes and mononuclear phagocytes, are known to stimulate increased glucose uptake in target cells. We show here that vitamin C uptake in neutrophils, monocytes, and a neutrophilic HL-60 cell line is enhanced by the CSFs. Hexose uptake studies and competition analyses showed that dehydroascorbic acid is taken up by these cells through facilitative glucose transporters. Human monocytes were found to have a greater capacity to take up dehydroascorbic acid than neutrophils, related to more facilitative glucose transporters on the monocyte cell membrane. Ascorbic acid was not transported by these myeloid cells, indicating that they do not express a sodium-ascorbate cotransporter. Granulocyte (G)- and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) stimulated increased uptake of vitamin C in human neutrophils, monocytes, and HL-60 neutrophils. In HL-60 neutrophils, GM-CSF increased both the transport of dehydroascorbic acid and the intracellular accumulation of ascorbic acid. The increase in transport was related to a decrease in Km for transport of dehydroascorbic acid without a change in Vmax. Increased ascorbic acid accumulation was a secondary effect of increased transport. Triggering the neutrophils with the peptide fMetLeuPhe led to enhanced vitamin C uptake by increasing the oxidation of ascorbic acid to the transportable moiety dehydroascorbic acid, and this effect was increased by priming the cells with GM-CSF. Thus, the CSFs act at least at two distinct functional loci to increase cellular vitamin C uptake: conversion of ascorbic acid to dehydroascorbic acid by enhanced oxidation in the pericellular milieu and increased transport of DHA through the facilitative glucose transporters at the cell membrane. These results link the regulated uptake of vitamin C in human host defense cells to the action of CSFs.
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PMID:Colony-stimulating factors signal for increased transport of vitamin C in human host defense cells. 951 55

Atherosclerosis is increasingly recognized as an inflammatory disease. Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is a proinflammatory cytokine, recently implicated as a prominent component of the regulatory network involved in atherogenesis. We aimed to study the relationship between circulating GM-CSF levels and serum fatty acid (FA) composition in 78 healthy subjects. The latter was analyzed by gas-liquid chromatography and GM-CSF by a high-sensitivity commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Among women (n = 40), serum GM-CSF levels were found to be positively associated with the proportion of palmitic acid (C16:0) and negatively with linoleic acid (C18:2omega-6), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, C22:6omega-3), and the proportion of total essential FA. After excluding smoking women (n = 6), the associations among GM-CSF and serum linoleic acid concentration (r = -0.49, P =.003), arachidonic acid (r = -0.52, P =.001), and DHA (r = -0.34, P =.04) were strengthened. The ratio of palmitic to linoleic and DHA acids was the single best predictor of serum GM-CSF in all subjects. Together with arachidonic acid, it contributed to 22% of the GM-CSF variance in women, after taking into account the effects of age, body mass index (BMI), blood pressure, and smoking status. None of these associations were observed among men. In conclusion, serum FA composition is associated with circulating GM-CSF specifically in women. As human arterial and venous smooth muscle cells release GM-CSF, and treatment of endothelial cells with oxidized low-density lipoproteins results in a rapid expression of GM-CSF, the mechanisms involved in these associations and the sex-linked differences should be further explored.
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PMID:Circulating granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and serum fatty acid composition in men and women. 1173 97