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Title: Effect of sulphite on the oxidative metabolism of human neutrophils: studies with lucigenin- and luminol-dependent chemiluminescence. Author: Mishra A, Dayal N, Beck-Speier I. Journal: J Biolumin Chemilumin; 1995; 10(1):9-19. PubMed ID: 7762419. Abstract: To assess the effect of sulphite on the oxidative metabolism of human neutrophils, chemiluminescence (CL) measurements were performed using lucigenin and luminol as chemiluminigenic probes. Lucigenin-dependent CL was used for measuring superoxide anion (O2-) production, and luminol-dependent CL was used for determination of myeloperoxidase (MPO)-connected processes. With sulphite concentrations of 0.01 to 1 mmol/L, resting neutrophils showed an up to sixfold increase of lucigenin-dependent CL, but only a 1.9-fold increase of luminol-dependent CL. Subsequent stimulation of sulphite-treated neutrophils with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) (soluble stimulant) or zymosan (particulate stimulant) resulted in an additional significant increase of lucigenin-dependent CL compared to stimulated control cells, whereas luminol-dependent CL increased slightly by 0.01 mmol/L sulphite and decreased then continuously. Sulphite concentrations above 1 mmol/L decreased both lucigenin- and luminol-dependent CL of resting and PMA- or zymosan-stimulated neutrophils. Lucigenin-dependent CL of sulphite-treated and subsequently stimulated neutrophils was strongly inhibited by extracellularly added superoxide dismutase, whereas luminol-dependent CL was markedly reduced by the MPO inhibitor azide. The intracellular activity of MPO in neutrophils stimulated with PMA in the presence of sulphite (2 mmol/L) was reduced by 55%. Sulphite (0.1 mmol/L) also inhibited strongly the activity of MPO in a cell-free system. These results indicate that micromolar concentrations of sulphite exert a stimulating effect on the O2- production of neutrophils extracellularly, but have an inhibitory effect on MPO-catalysed reactions intracellularly.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]