Patel K D, Zimmerman G A, Prescott S M, McEver R P, McIntyre T M
Department of Biochemistry, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City 84112.
J Cell Biol. 1991 Feb;112(4):749-59. doi: 10.1083/jcb.112.4.749.
The initial step in extravasation of neutrophils (polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMNs]) to the extravascular space is adherence to the endothelium. We examined the effect of oxidants on this process by treating human endothelial cells with H2O2, t-butylhydroperoxide, or menadione. This resulted in a surface adhesive for PMN between 1 and 4 h after exposure. The oxidants needed to be present only for a brief period at the initiation of the assay. Adhesion was an endothelial cell-dependent process that did not require an active response from the PMN. The adhesive molecule was not platelet-activating factor, which mediates PMN adherence when endothelial cells are briefly exposed to higher concentrations of H2O2 (Lewis, M. S., R. E. Whatley, P. Cain, T. M. McIntyre, S. M. Prescott, and G. A. Zimmerman. 1988. J. Clin. Invest. 82:2045-2055), nor was it ELAM-1, an adhesive glycoprotein induced by cytokines. Oxidant-induced adhesion did not require protein synthesis, was inhibited by antioxidants, and, when peroxides were the oxidants, was inhibited by intracellular iron chelators. Granule membrane protein-140 (GMP-140) is a membrane-associated glycoprotein that can be translocated from its intracellular storage pool to the surface of endothelial cells where it acts as a ligand for PMN adhesion (Geng, J.-G., M. P. Bevilacqua, K. L. Moore, T. M. McIntyre, S. M. Prescott, J. M. Kim, G. A. Bliss, G. A. Zimmerman, and R. P. McEver. 1990. Nature (Lond). 343:757-760). We found that endothelial cells exposed to oxidants expressed GMP-140 on their surface, and that an mAb against GMP-140 or solubilized GMP-140 completely blocked PMN adherence to oxidant-treated endothelial cells. Thus, exposure of endothelial cells to oxygen radicals induces the prolonged expression of GMP-140 on the cell surface, which results in enhanced PMN adherence.
中性粒细胞(多形核白细胞[PMN])渗出到血管外间隙的初始步骤是黏附于内皮细胞。我们通过用H2O2、叔丁基过氧化氢或甲萘醌处理人内皮细胞,研究了氧化剂对这一过程的影响。这导致在暴露后1至4小时内出现了一种PMN的表面黏附物质。氧化剂仅需在试验开始时短暂存在。黏附是一个依赖内皮细胞的过程,不需要PMN产生主动反应。这种黏附分子不是血小板活化因子,当内皮细胞短暂暴露于较高浓度的H2O2时,血小板活化因子介导PMN的黏附(Lewis,M.S.,R.E.Whatley,P.Cain,T.M.McIntyre,S.M.Prescott,和G.A.Zimmerman.1988.J Clin Invest.82:2045 - 2055),也不是ELAM - 1,一种由细胞因子诱导的黏附糖蛋白。氧化剂诱导的黏附不需要蛋白质合成,被抗氧化剂抑制,并且当过氧化物作为氧化剂时,被细胞内铁螯合剂抑制。颗粒膜蛋白 - 140(GMP - 140)是一种膜相关糖蛋白,它可以从细胞内储存池转运到内皮细胞表面,在那里它作为PMN黏附的配体(Geng,J.-G.,M.P.Bevilacqua,K.L.Moore,T.M.McIntyre,S.M.Prescott,J.M.Kim,G.A.Bliss,G.A.Zimmerman,和R.P.McEver.1990.Nature(Lond).343:757 - 760)。我们发现暴露于氧化剂的内皮细胞在其表面表达GMP - 140,并且一种针对GMP - 140的单克隆抗体或可溶性GMP - 140完全阻断了PMN对经氧化剂处理的内皮细胞的黏附。因此,内皮细胞暴露于氧自由基会诱导GMP - 140在细胞表面的持续表达,这导致PMN黏附增强。