These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Mast cells and neutrophils proteolytically activate chemokine precursor CTAP-III and are subject to counterregulation by PF-4 through inhibition of chymase and cathepsin G. Author: Schiemann F, Grimm TA, Hoch J, Gross R, Lindner B, Petersen F, Bulfone-Paus S, Brandt E. Journal: Blood; 2006 Mar 15; 107(6):2234-42. PubMed ID: 16317101. Abstract: The CXC chemokines platelet factor 4 (PF-4/CXCL4) and connective tissue-activating peptide III (CTAP-III) are released by activated human platelets in micromolar concentrations. So far, neutrophils have been recognized to cleave the precursor CTAP-III to form the active chemokine neutrophil-activating peptide 2 (NAP-2/CXCL7) through limited proteolysis by membrane-associated cathepsin G. Here we show for the first time that activated human skin mast cells (MCs) convert CTAP-III into biologically active NAP-2 through proteolytic cleavage by released chymase. A direct comparison on a cell number basis revealed that unstimulated MCs exceed the CTAP-III-processing potency of neutrophils about 30-fold, whereas MCs activated by IgE cross-linking exhibit even 1000-fold higher CTAP-III-processing capacity than fMLP-stimulated neutrophils. Intriguingly, PF-4 counteracted MC- as well as neutrophil-mediated NAP-2 generation at physiologically relevant concentrations. Addressing the underlying mechanism, we obtained evidence that PF-4 acts as an inhibitor of the CTAP-III-processing enzymes cathepsin G and chymase without becoming cleaved itself as a competitive substrate. Because cleavage of the CTAP-III-unrelated substrate substance P was also affected by PF-4, our results suggest a regulatory role for PF-4 not only in NAP-2 generation but also in neutrophil- and MC-mediated processing of other physiologically relevant inflammatory mediators.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]