Brunkhorst B, Niederman R
Department of Cell Biology, Forsyth Research Institute, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
Infect Immun. 1991 Apr;59(4):1378-86. doi: 10.1128/iai.59.4.1378-1386.1991.
Ammonium, a weak base produced as a metabolic by-product of urea metabolism by bacterial pathogens, inhibits a variety of motile polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) functions. It was initially assumed that the mechanism of leukocyte inhibition was due to cytoplasmic alkalinization. However, while it is clear that ammonium can effect cytoplasmic alkalinization, current data indicate that alterations in chemotaxis, degranulation, and receptor recycling occur independently of cytoplasmic alkalinization. Since these are motility-related events, we examined the possibility that alterations in cytoskeletal actin may account for the effects of ammonium on PMN function. The results indicate that ammonium can inhibit degranulation, decrease cytoskeletal actin, and increase actin depolymerization rates. These findings are supported by five lines of evidence. First, formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP)-induced elastase release was inhibited by 85% +/- 3% in the presence of ammonium, and ammonium by itself did not stimulate elastase release. Second, ammonium treatment of resting PMNs caused a rapid 38% +/- 6% decrease in cytoskeletal actin. Third, ammonium treatment accelerated the fMLP-induced depolymerization phase of the cytoskeletal actin transient by 150% +/- 12%. Fourth, in resting PMNs treated with cytochalasin B or D, ammonium induced a 21% +/- 4% and a 25% +/- 5% decrease in cytoskeletal actin, respectively. Conversely, ammonium did not affect the ability of the cytochalasins to inhibit an fMLP-induced cytoskeletal actin transient. Fifth, pertussis toxin treatment of neutrophils did not affect the ammonium-stimulated decrease in cytoskeletal actin. These results suggest that ammonium can inhibit neutrophil function by altering cytoskeletal actin and therefore provide new information regarding potential pathogenic mechanisms for bacterial pathogens.
铵是细菌病原体尿素代谢产生的一种弱碱代谢副产物,可抑制多种运动性多形核白细胞(PMN)的功能。最初认为白细胞抑制机制是由于细胞质碱化。然而,虽然铵确实能引起细胞质碱化,但目前的数据表明,趋化性、脱颗粒和受体循环的改变与细胞质碱化无关。由于这些都是与运动相关的事件,我们研究了细胞骨架肌动蛋白的改变是否可以解释铵对PMN功能的影响。结果表明,铵可抑制脱颗粒、减少细胞骨架肌动蛋白并增加肌动蛋白解聚速率。这些发现得到了五条证据的支持。第一,在有铵存在的情况下,甲酰甲硫氨酰 - 亮氨酰 - 苯丙氨酸(fMLP)诱导的弹性蛋白酶释放被抑制了85%±3%,而铵本身不会刺激弹性蛋白酶释放。第二,用铵处理静息的PMN会使细胞骨架肌动蛋白迅速减少38%±6%。第三,铵处理使细胞骨架肌动蛋白瞬变的fMLP诱导的解聚阶段加速了150%±12%。第四,在用细胞松弛素B或D处理的静息PMN中,铵分别使细胞骨架肌动蛋白减少了21%±4%和25%±5%。相反,铵并不影响细胞松弛素抑制fMLP诱导的细胞骨架肌动蛋白瞬变的能力。第五,用百日咳毒素处理中性粒细胞并不影响铵刺激引起的细胞骨架肌动蛋白减少。这些结果表明,铵可通过改变细胞骨架肌动蛋白来抑制中性粒细胞功能,因此为细菌病原体的潜在致病机制提供了新信息。