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Microbiology and Immunology 2001

Cross-linking of beta2 integrins caused diminished responses of neutrophils to priming agents like lipopolysaccharide or tumor necrosis factor-alpha: possible involvement of tyrosine kinase Syk.

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K Kusumoto
Y Aida
K Maeda
M J Pabst

Keywords

Abstract

Neutrophils up-regulate beta2 integrins like CD11b/CD18 in response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Up-regulation of beta2 integrins causes neutrophils to adhere to surfaces, and to release superoxide anion (O2-). When neutrophils are exposed to LPS plus plasma under conditions not favorable for adherence (absence of Mg2+), the cells do not spontaneously release O2-, but instead they are primed for enhanced release of O2- after subsequent triggering by fMLP. In the presence of Mg2+, neutrophils adhere in response to LPS but fMLP-triggered O2- release by LPS-primed neutrophils is diminished. To understand why adherence interferes with the response of neutrophils to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP), beta2 integrins were cross-linked by mouse monoclonal antibodies that had been immobilized by surface-bound anti-mouse antibody. When unprimed neutrophils were trapped on the surface by these cross-linked monoclonal antibodies, O2- release was triggered, and priming by LPS for fMLP-triggered O2- release was diminished, indicating that this cross-linking of beta2 integrins mimicked adherence. Alkaline phosphatase is up-regulated by LPS or tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and this response was also diminished by the cross-linking antibodies. The diminished alkaline phosphatase up-regulation was reversed by genistein, a general inhibitor of tyrosine kinases, and by piceatannol, an inhibitor for Syk kinase. Piceatannol also inhibited the phosphorylation of Syk caused by cross-linking of beta2 integrins. These results suggested that adherence-induced triggering and Syk kinase activation might be responsible for the diminished response of LPS-primed neutrophils to fMLP when neutrophils were adherent.

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