학술논문

Tyrosine phosphatase antagonist-induced activation of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase: a possible role for protein kinase C.
Document Type
Article
Source
Immunology. Jun95, Vol. 85 Issue 2, p304-310. 7p.
Subject
*PROTEIN-tyrosine phosphatase
*PHOSPHOPROTEIN phosphatases
*NEUTROPHILS
*GRANULOCYTES
*PHAGOCYTES
*NAD (Coenzyme)
Language
ISSN
0019-2805
Abstract
To investigate the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in polymorphonuclear leucocyte (PMN) activation we have examined the effect of the potent tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) inhibitor, vanadyl hydroperoxide, on PMN function. Western blotting of vanadyl hydroperoxide-treated PMN showed that there was a rapid dose-dependent increase in tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins. Vanadyl hydroperoxide also induced superoxide production in PMN over the range 10-100 µM, similar to the concentrations that also induced tyrosine phosphorylation. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor erbstatin totally inhibited the respiratory burst induced by vanadyl hydroperoxide, showing that tyrosine kinase activity was necessary for superoxide production. The protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors chelerythrine and bisidolylmaleimide inhibited the vanadyl hydroperoxideinduced respiratory burst with an inhibitory concentration of 50% (IC50) close to that for PKC inhibition without affecting tyrosine phosphorylation. These results indicate a possible role for PKC in vanadyl hydroperoxide-modiated superoxide production, and that any PKC involvement is downstream of tyrosine phosphorylation. These results further demonstrate that inhibition of phosphotyrosine phosphatases results in the activation of a functional response, indicating a critical role for phosphotyrosine phosphatases in PMN stimulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]