Emlen W, Carl V, Burdick G
Division of Rheumatology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver 80262.
Clin Exp Immunol. 1992 Jul;89(1):8-17. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2249.1992.tb06869.x.
Complement receptor 1 (CR1) on primate red blood cells (RBC) binds most complement-fixing immune complexes in the circulation. It has been postulated that by binding them, RBC keep immune complexes in the intravascular space and deliver them to the tissue macrophages of the mononuclear phagocyte system. We have developed an in vitro model to study the transfer of RBC-bound immune complexes (heat-aggregated IgG and DNA-anti-DNA) to phagocytic cells (human monocytes). Transfer of immune complexes from RBC to monocytes occurred significantly more rapidly than monocyte uptake of the same immune complexes from solution. In the transfer process, complex-bearing RBC were not bound or sequestered by the monocytes. To define the monocyte receptors involved in binding immune complexes from the RBC surface, monocyte receptors were blocked with MoAbs (anti-CR1, anti-FcRII) or EDTA (to block CR3). Monocyte binding of immune complexes primarily used CR1 with a small contribution from FcRII, and with little or no contribution from CR3 and FcRI. Uptake of immune complexes from solution employed the same monocyte receptors as binding of complexes from the RBC surface. Immune complexes in solution bound to RBC and to monocytes with equally high avidity (approximately 1 x 10(11) l/M), but monocytes expressed a 15-20-fold greater number of immune complex binding sites. We propose that immune complexes distribute between RBC and monocytes according to the binding capacity of these cells, such that at equal or high RBC/monocyte ratios as would be seen in the circulation immune complexes bind to RBC, but at low RBC/monocyte ratios (as would be seen in the sinusoidal circulation of the liver and spleen), most immune complexes bind to monocytes. To define the pathway by which immune complexes move from RBC to monocytes, their release from RBC CR1 was examined. Under various conditions, the dissociation rate was extremely slow, and did not increase with the addition of monocyte supernatants. To examine whether factor I-mediated processing of immune complexes enhances binding of immune complexes to monocytes, RBC-bound complexes were released with factor I, and binding of these 'processed' immune complexes to monocytes was examined. Monocyte binding of these processed immune complexes was slower than of control ones; furthermore, performance of transfer experiments at 4 degrees C, which significantly shows enzymatic processes, did not decrease the rate of immune complex transfer from RBC to monocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
灵长类红细胞(RBC)上的补体受体1(CR1)可结合循环中大多数固定补体的免疫复合物。据推测,通过结合这些复合物,红细胞将免疫复合物保留在血管内空间,并将其递送至单核吞噬细胞系统的组织巨噬细胞。我们建立了一个体外模型,以研究红细胞结合的免疫复合物(热聚集IgG和DNA-抗DNA)向吞噬细胞(人单核细胞)的转移。免疫复合物从红细胞向单核细胞的转移比单核细胞从溶液中摄取相同免疫复合物的速度明显更快。在转移过程中,携带复合物的红细胞未被单核细胞结合或滞留。为了确定参与从红细胞表面结合免疫复合物的单核细胞受体,用单克隆抗体(抗CR1、抗FcRII)或乙二胺四乙酸(EDTA,用于阻断CR3)阻断单核细胞受体。免疫复合物与单核细胞的结合主要通过CR1,FcRII的作用较小,而CR3和FcRI的作用很小或没有作用。从溶液中摄取免疫复合物与从红细胞表面结合复合物使用相同的单核细胞受体。溶液中的免疫复合物与红细胞和单核细胞的结合亲和力相同(约1×10¹¹ l/M),但单核细胞表达的免疫复合物结合位点数量多15 - 20倍。我们提出,免疫复合物根据这些细胞的结合能力在红细胞和单核细胞之间分布,使得在循环中所见的相等或高红细胞/单核细胞比率下,免疫复合物与红细胞结合,但在低红细胞/单核细胞比率下(如在肝脏和脾脏的窦状循环中所见),大多数免疫复合物与单核细胞结合。为了确定免疫复合物从红细胞转移到单核细胞的途径,研究了它们从红细胞CR1上的释放。在各种条件下,解离速率极慢,并且不会因添加单核细胞上清液而增加。为了检查I因子介导的免疫复合物加工是否增强免疫复合物与单核细胞的结合,用I因子释放红细胞结合的复合物,并检查这些“加工过的”免疫复合物与单核细胞的结合。这些加工过的免疫复合物与单核细胞的结合比对照复合物慢;此外,在4℃进行转移实验(这显著显示酶促过程)并没有降低免疫复合物从红细胞向单核细胞的转移速率。(摘要截短至400字)