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  • Title: Release of oxygen metabolites from chemoattractant-stimulated neutrophils is inhibited by resting platelets: role of extracellular adenosine and actin polymerization.
    Author: Bengtsson T, Zalavary S, Stendahl O, Grenegård M.
    Journal: Blood; 1996 May 15; 87(10):4411-23. PubMed ID: 8639803.
    Abstract:
    The effect of human platelets on chemoattractant-induced generation of oxygen metabolites in neutrophils was investigated, using luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence (CL). Resting platelets inhibited the extracellular, but not the intracellular, production of oxygen radicals in formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMet-Leu-Phe)-stimulated neutrophils. Maximal effect was obtained at the physiological neutrophil/platelet ratio of 1/50. Similar results were acquired by adding supernatants of platelets, indicating a role for a soluble factor. Removal of extracellular adenosine by adenosine deaminase (ADA), or blocking of adenosine-receptors by theophylline, antagonized the inhibitory effects of platelets (or the equivalent supernatant) on the neutrophil respiratory burst. In contrast, accumulation of adenosine by apyrase enhanced the inhibition. Exogenous adenosine mimicked the effects of platelets on the fMet-Leu-Phe-induced respiratory burst. To further assess the role of platelet-derived adenosine, the platelets were fixed with paraformaldehyde. We found that fixed platelets, as well as their supernatant, inhibited the fMet-Leu-Phe-induced CL-response to the same extent as viable cells. These effects were also reversed by ADA and theophylline, respectively. A prior removal of adenosine in the platelet suspension by ADA, followed by treatment with erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)-adenine (EHNA) to inactivate ADA, did not reverse the inhibitory action of platelets on the fMet-Leu-Phe-induced CL-response in neutrophils. However, if adenosine receptors of neutrophil at the same time were blocked with theophyline, the inhibition was significantly reduced. Platelets markedly increased the generation of adenosine in a neutrophil suspension. The effect was antagonized by S-(4-Nitrobenzyl)-6-thioguanosine (NBTG), but unaffected by alpha, beta-methyl-eneadenosine5'diphosphate (AMP-CP), indicating that the platelet-dependent accumulation of adenosine is due to an increased release of endogenous adenosine from neutrophils and not to a degradation of extracellular AMP. In correlation, NBTG, but not AMP-CP, reversed the platelet-mediated inhibition of the fMet-Leu-Phe-induced CL-response in neutrophils. Consequently, these data suggest that a platelet-derived factor increases the release of endogenously formed adenosine from neutrophils, terminating the production of oxygen radicals. The inhibition of oxidase activity was also associated with a platelet-induced polymerization of actin in the margin of the neutrophils. Treatment of neutrophils with cytochalasin B reversed the effects of platelets, both on F-actin content and CL-response. In summary, resting platelets limit the release of oxygen radicals from chemoattractant-stimulated neutrophils, thus preventing excessive damage to host tissues in the vascular space. This effect is suggested to be associated with an increase generation of neutrophil-derived adenosine enhancing an autoregulatory inhibitory pathway, and a peripheral accumulation of actin filaments forming a barrier for extracellular release of reactive oxygen radicals.
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