Monocyte stimulation by reactive oxygen species: Role of superoxide and intracellular Ca2+

被引:0
|
作者
T. Volk
J. Gerst
G. Faust-Belbe
A. Stroehmann
W.J. Kox
机构
[1] Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Therapy,
[2] University Hospital Charité,undefined
[3] Schumannstr. 20/21,undefined
[4] D-10117 Berlin,undefined
[5] Germany,undefined
[6] Fax +493028025065,undefined
[7] e-mail: thomas.volk@charite.de ,undefined
[8] Institute for Clinical Immunology,undefined
[9] University Hospital Charité,undefined
[10] Schumannstr. 20/21,undefined
[11] D-10117 Berlin,undefined
[12] Germany ,undefined
来源
Inflammation Research | 1999年 / 48卷
关键词
Key words:Reactive oxygen species — Intracellular calcium — Mononuclear cells — Tumor necrosis factor-α;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: Production of reactive oxygen species has generally been linked to inflammatory processes. Whether the presence of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide affects mononuclear cell function was investigated with an in vitro model using isolated human mononuclear cells. ¶Materials and Methods: Human mononuclear cells were isolated from buffy coat. Toxicity was measured with Trypan blue exclusion, secreted TNF-α was measured with an ELISA, reactive oxygen species within mononuclear cells were quantified with dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate fluorescence, intracellular TNF-α was measured with flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. ¶Results: The enzymatic production of superoxide caused a dose-dependent increase in TNF-α synthesis, whereas hydrogen peroxide was ineffective. Flow cytometric measurements and immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated that monocytes were the main TNF-α producing population. This proinflammatory reaction was further characterized by pharmacologically investigating Ca2+ signalling pathways. Superoxide stimulated TNF-α secretion was inhibited by intracellular Ca2+-buffers (MAPT-AM and BAPT-AM) or VOC operating antagonists (diltiazem and verapamil) and only to a small extent by pharmacological inhibitors of ligand-gated pathways (TMB-8 and SKF 96368). ¶Conclusion: We propose that superoxide activates human mononuclear cells in a Ca2+-dependent manner.
引用
收藏
页码:544 / 549
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Role of intracellular Ca2+, reactive oxygen species, mitochondria transmembrane potential, and antioxidant enzymes in heavy metal-induced apoptosis in fish cells
    Xiang, LX
    Shao, JZ
    BULLETIN OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY, 2003, 71 (01) : 114 - 122
  • [22] Calcineurin:: a protein phosphatase under the control of Ca2+ and reactive oxygen species
    Klee, C
    Wang, X
    Ren, H
    Ghosh, M
    Samouilov, A
    Zweier, J
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2003, 87 : 14 - 14
  • [23] Endothelial Cell Reactive Oxygen Species and Ca2+ Signaling in Pulmonary Hypertension
    Suresh, Karthik
    Shimoda, Larissa A.
    PULMONARY VASCULATURE REDOX SIGNALING IN HEALTH AND DISEASE, 2017, 967 : 299 - 314
  • [24] Ca2+ and reactive oxygen species in staurosporine-induced neuronal apoptosis
    Prehn, JHM
    Jordan, J
    Ghadge, GD
    Preis, E
    Galindo, MF
    Roos, RP
    Krieglstein, J
    Miller, RJ
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 1997, 68 (04) : 1679 - 1685
  • [25] Harmful increase of astrocytic Ca2+ trigger reactive oxygen species production
    Morito, R.
    Miyazaki, K.
    Kadji, H. J. E.
    Uchida, T.
    Kawashima, R.
    Riera, J.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, 2009, 109 : 284 - 284
  • [26] Involvement of Ca2+ in globular adiponectin-induced reactive oxygen species
    Akifusa, Sumio
    Kamio, Noriaki
    Shimazaki, Yoshihiro
    Yamaguchi, Noboru
    Yamashita, Yoshihisa
    BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2009, 381 (04) : 649 - 653
  • [27] Does Ca2+ channel blocker influence the formation of reactive oxygen species?
    Fink, B
    Sommer, O
    Bassenge, E
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2000, 14 (04): : A577 - A577
  • [28] Angiotensin II, reactive oxygen species, and Ca2+ signaling in afferent arterioles
    Fellner, SK
    Arendshorst, WJ
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-RENAL PHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 289 (05) : F1012 - F1019
  • [29] Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species regulate mitochondrial Ca2+ homeostasis and respiration
    Richter, C
    BIOSCIENCE REPORTS, 1997, 17 (01) : 53 - 66
  • [30] Reactive oxygen species and superoxide dismutases: Role in joint diseases
    Afonso, Valery
    Champy, Rornuald
    Mitrovic, Dragoslav
    Collin, Pascal
    Lomri, Abderrahim
    JOINT BONE SPINE, 2007, 74 (04) : 324 - 329