The signal transduction pathway involved in the migration induced by a monocyte chemotactic cytokine
Article 1991 en
Authors
SS
Silvano Sozzani
WL
Walter Luini
MM
Marina Molino
Abstract
1 min read
Recombinant monocyte-chemotactic and activating factor (rMCAF; alternative acronyms MCP-1, TDCF, human JE) induced migration of human monocytes across polycarbonate or nitrocellulose filters. Maximal induction of migration was observed at a concentration of 10 ng/ml (10(-9) M). Checkerboard analysis revealed that rMCAF elicited true gradient-dependent chemotactic migration, although a gradient independent chemokinetic effect was observed at low concentrations (1-5 ng/ml). rMCAF caused a rapid (less than 5 s) and transient (approximately 1.5 min) increase of free cytosolic Ca2+ ions, as assessed by the fura-2 probe. No Ca2+ increase was detected in neutrophils or lymphocytes stimulated by rMCAF. Studies conducted in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ or in the presence of Ni2+ (an inhibitor of Ca2+ influx) suggested that the increase of intracellular Ca2+ induced by rMCAF is dependent on the influx of extracellular Ca2+ through plasma membrane channels. Bordetella pertussis toxin inhibited the intracellular Ca2+ elevation and chemotaxis caused by rMCAF. The possible involvement of Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinases in rMCAF signaling pathway(s) was explored using inhibitors. Inhibitors of GMP-dependent kinase and myosin L chain kinase had no effect on rMCAF-induced monocyte migration. In contrast, protein kinase C/cAMP-dependent kinase inhibitors (such as, C-I, H-7, HA-1004, KT5720, and Staurosporine) markedly decreased rMCAF induced chemotaxis suggesting the involvement of a serine/threonine protein kinase, possibly protein kinase C, in rMCAF signaling pathway.
Silvano Sozzani, Massimo Locati, Dan Zhou, Monica Rieppi, Walter Luini, Giuseppe Lamorte, Giancario Bianchi, Nadia Polentarutti, Paola Allavena, Alberto Mantovani
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