Morel F, Cohen Tanugi Cholley L, Brandolin G, Dianoux A C, Martel C, Champelovier P, Seigneurin J M, Francois P, Bost M, Vignais P V
Laboratoire d'Enzymologie, CHRU, Grenoble, France.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 1993 Aug 4;1182(1):101-9. doi: 10.1016/0925-4439(93)90159-x.
The O2- generating NADPH oxidase of human Epstein-Barr virus immortalized B lymphocytes (EBV-B lymphocytes) and the NADPH oxidase of human neutrophils were compared. The capacity of the oxidase of EBV-B lymphocytes to generate O2- is 100-fold less than that of neutrophils. Like the oxidase of neutrophils, the oxidase of EBV-B lymphocytes is decreased or abolished in chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). Activation of neutrophil oxidase in an heterologous cell-free system, using human neutrophil membranes and EBV-B lymphocyte cytosol from healthy and CGD patients, combined with immunoblotting investigations of the cytosolic activating factors p47 and p67 involved in O2- production, suggests that neutrophils and EBV-B lymphocytes possess similar complements of cytosolic factors p47 and p67. Cytochrome b -245, the major membrane redox component of the O2- generating oxidase, is only slightly expressed in the membrane of EBV-B lymphocytes. A sensitive and specific immunocytochemical method for detection of the two subunits of cytochrome b -245 is described; it shows that both subunits are virtually absent in EBV-B lymphocytes from CGD patients deficient in the large subunit.