Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery, Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02903
Abstract
Macrophages from experimental wounds in rats were tested for their capacity to generate reactive oxygen intermediates. Measurements of superoxide and H2O2release, [Formula: see text]-dependent lucigenin chemiluminescence, oxygen consumption, hexose monophosphate shunt flux, and NADPH oxidase activity in cell lysates indicated, at best, the presence of a vestigial respiratory burst response in these cells. The inability of wound cells to release[Formula: see text] was not rekindled by priming with endotoxin or interferon-γ in vivo or in vitro. NADPH oxidase activity in a cell-free system demonstrated that wound macrophage membranes, but not their cytosols, were capable of sustaining maximal rates of [Formula: see text] production when mixed with their corresponding counterparts from human neutrophils. Immune detection experiments showed wound macrophages to be particularly deficient in the cytosolic component of the NADPH oxidase p47- phox. Addition of recombinant p47- phox to the human neutrophil-cell membrane/wound macrophage cytosol cell-free oxidase assay, however, failed to support[Formula: see text] production. Present findings indicate an unexpected deficit of wound macrophages in their capacity to generate reactive oxygen intermediates.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
9 articles.
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