Adenosine modulation of tumor necrosis factor-α-induced neutrophil activation
Autor: | Gail W. Sullivan, Holliday T. Carper, Luong S, Barnes Cr, Gerald L. Mandell |
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Rok vydání: | 1995 |
Předmět: |
Lipopolysaccharides
Adenosine Lipopolysaccharide Neutrophils Adenosine receptor antagonist Biochemistry Neutrophil Activation chemistry.chemical_compound Adenosine deaminase Adjuvants Immunologic Superoxides medicine Humans Peroxidase Respiratory Burst Pharmacology biology Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha hemic and immune systems N-Formylmethionine leucyl-phenylalanine Molecular biology Recombinant Proteins Respiratory burst N-Formylmethionine Leucyl-Phenylalanine chemistry Culture Media Conditioned Myeloperoxidase Luminescent Measurements Immunology Leukocytes Mononuclear biology.protein Tumor necrosis factor alpha medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Biochemical Pharmacology. 50:1851-1857 |
ISSN: | 0006-2952 |
Popis: | We hypothesized that adenosine, known to be release from inflammatory sites, could lessen the potentially damaging activity of neutrophils (PMN) primed by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) at sites of infection. We investigated the effect of adenosine on PMN primed with cell-free medium from mononuclear leukocytes (MNL) that had been treated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) yielding a conditioned medium rich in TNF alpha and on PMN primed with recombinant human TNF alpha (rhTNF alpha). LPS (10 ng/mL) minimally primed PMN, but LPS-MNL-conditioned medium increased PMN chemiluminescence in response to f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP) 1242% compared with unprimed PMN. LPS-MNL-conditioned medium contained adenosine (approximately 30 nM). Converting the adenosine in the LPS-MNL-conditioned medium to inosine with adenosine deaminase (ADA) or blocking adenosine binding to PMN with the adenosine receptor antagonist 1,3-dipropyl-8-(phenyl-p-acrylate)-xanthine (BW A1433U) resulted in a near doubling of chemiluminescence. The LPS-MNL-conditioned medium contained TNF alpha (836 pg/mL; approximately 1 U/mL). Recombinant human TNF alpha (1 U/mL) primed PMN for a 1033% increase in chemiluminescence. Added adenosine decreased rhTNF alpha-primed PMN chemiluminescence (IC50 approximately 100 nM), and adenosine (100 nM) decreased both superoxide and myeloperoxidase release from rhTNF alpha-primed fMLP-stimulated PMN. The activity of adenosine was counteracted by ADA and BW A1433U, and the modulating effect of adenosine was on the primed response rather than on priming per se. Thus, physiological concentrations of adenosine reduce the effects of recombinant human TNF alpha and native human TNF alpha (released from LPS-treated MNL) on PMN activity. Endogenous adenosine may preclude or minimize damage to infected tissue by damping the TNF alpha-primed PMN oxidative response. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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