The human PMN leukocyte chemotactic activity of complex hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs).

E J Goetzl(Brigham and Women's Hospital), W C Pickett(Brigham and Women's Hospital)
The Journal of Immunology
October 1, 1980
Cited by 515

Abstract

The lipoxygenation of arachidonic acid in basophils, mastocytoma cells, and other leukocytes generates the unstable intermediate 5-hydroperoxy-eicostaetraenoic acid, which is converted in part to a series of complex hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs) with additional polar substituents and 3 conjugated double bonds. One of the products, 5,12-di-HETE, is chemotactic for human neutrophils in vitro at a concentration as low as 3 ng/ml and evokes a maximal neutrophil chemotactic response at 30 ng/ml, as compared to 1000 ng/ml for 5-HETE and 10,000 to 20,000 ng/ml for 11-HETE and 12-HETE. In contrast, other products in the same series, such as the slow reacting substance 5-hydroxy-6-glutathionyl-eicosatetraenoic acid (leukotriene C), and the platelet-derived 8,9,12-trihydroxy-eicosatrienoic acid and 8,11,12-trihydroxy-eicosatrienoic acid exhibited only marginal neutrophil chemotactic activity. Only 5,12-di-HETE released significant quantities of beta-glucuronidase and lysozyme from the neutrophils, but the maximal level of enzyme release was far less than that for the chemotactic fragment of C5 and the formyl-methionyl peptides.


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