Neutrophils exposed to bacterial lipopolysaccharide upregulate NADPH oxidase assembly.

FR DeLeo, J Renee, S McCormick… - The Journal of …, 1998 - Am Soc Clin Investig
FR DeLeo, J Renee, S McCormick, M Nakamura, M Apicella, JP Weiss, WM Nauseef
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1998Am Soc Clin Investig
Bacterial LPS is a pluripotent agonist for PMNs. Although it does not activate the NADPH-
dependent oxidase directly, LPS renders PMNs more responsive to other stimuli, a
phenomenon known as" priming." Since the mechanism of LPS-dependent priming is
incompletely understood, we investigated its effects on assembly and activation of the
NADPH oxidase. LPS pretreatment increased superoxide (O2-) generation nearly 10-fold in
response to N-formyl methionyl leucyl phenylalanine (fMLP). In a broken-cell O2--generating …
Bacterial LPS is a pluripotent agonist for PMNs. Although it does not activate the NADPH-dependent oxidase directly, LPS renders PMNs more responsive to other stimuli, a phenomenon known as "priming." Since the mechanism of LPS-dependent priming is incompletely understood, we investigated its effects on assembly and activation of the NADPH oxidase. LPS pretreatment increased superoxide (O2-) generation nearly 10-fold in response to N-formyl methionyl leucyl phenylalanine (fMLP). In a broken-cell O2--generating system, activity was increased in plasma membrane-rich fractions and concomitantly decreased in specific granule-rich fractions from LPS-treated cells. Oxidation-reduction spectroscopy and flow cytometry indicated LPS increased plasma membrane association of flavocytochrome b558. Immunoblots of plasma membrane vesicles from LPS-treated PMNs demonstrated translocation of p47-phox but not of p67-phox or Rac2. However, PMNs treated sequentially with LPS and fMLP showed a three- to sixfold increase (compared with either agent alone) in plasma membrane-associated p47-phox, p67-phox, and Rac2, and translocation paralleled augmented O2- generation by intact PMNs. LPS treatment caused limited phosphorylation of p47-phox, and plasma membrane-enriched fractions from LPS- and/or fMLP-treated cells contained fewer acidic species of p47-phox than did those from cells treated with PMA. Taken together, these studies suggest that redistribution of NADPH oxidase components may underlie LPS priming of the respiratory burst.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation