Phospholipid metabolism in human neutrophils activated by N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. Degranulation is not required for release of arachidonic acid: studies with neutrophils and neutrophil-derived cytoplasts.
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ABSTRACT: Neutrophils respond to chemoattractants by aggregating, degranulating, remodelling of phospholipids and releasing arachidonic acid. To determine whether ligand-induced remodelling of phospholipids depends on redistribution of intracellular organelles (degranulation), we compared phospholipid remodelling of human neutrophils with that of neutrophil-derived cytoplasts. Cytoplasts, organelle-depleted vesicles of cytosol surrounded by plasmalemma, cannot degranulate. Without a stimulus, [3H]arachidonate was incorporated preferentially into phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylcholine (PC). Exposure of cytoplasts and neutrophils prelabelled with [3H]arachidonate or [14C]glycerol to fMet-Leu-Phe (10(-7) M) induced rapid changes in distribution of label and mass of individual phospholipids: [3H]arachidonate in phosphatidic acid (PA) increased 500% (120 s), [14C]glycerol incorporation and mass of PA approached 200% of unstimulated values, and [3H]arachidonate in PI decreased continuously; these data are compatible with activity of a PI/PA cycle. However, the mass of PI in both preparations and [14C]glycerol label in intact neutrophils increased initially (5 s), suggesting net synthesis and mobilization of more than one pool of PI. Heterogeneity of PC pools was also observed: [3H]arachidonate was lost from PC immediately upon addition of stimulus, whereas mass and [14C]glycerol values increased. Thus, net phospholipid synthesis, redistribution of arachidonate and activation of the PI/PA cycle are immediate responses of the neutrophil to receptor occupancy by chemoattractants. Furthermore, the similarity in response to fMet-Leu-Phe of neutrophils and granule-free cytoplasts indicates that these processes are independent of degranulation.
SUBMITTER: Wynkoop EM
PROVIDER: S-EPMC1146916 | biostudies-other | 1986 Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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