We quantitatively determined whether the selective phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor, rolipram, inhibits changes in the adhesion molecules CD11b and L-selectin on platelet-activating factor (PAF)-stimulated human neutrophils and eosinophils in vitro.Incubations were performed in human whole blood obtained from healthy volunteers, to restrict activation by purification procedures and to simulate in vivo conditions, in which different cell types may interact, more closely. Receptor expression was measured after fixation of cells, using monoclonal antibodies and flow cytometry.Concentration-dependent inhibition of the PAF-induced CD11b expression and L-selectin shedding for neutrophils and eosinophils was observed with rolipram, dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), prostaglandin E 2 (PGE 2 ), and isoproterenol. However, these inhibitions did not exceed 50%. Preincubation with rolipram (10 -8 M) and subsequent incubation with isoproterenol (0.5×10 -8 M) or PGE 2 (10 -8 M) induced a cumulative, but not synergistic, effect. Using the combination of rolipram with isoproterenol or PGE 2 , inhibition of PAF-induced Lselectin shedding from eosinophils was as high as 71±28 and 67±21%, respectively. Other inhibitions were below 50%.In conclusion, rolipram inhibits CD11b expression and L-selectin shedding of platelet-activating factor-stimulated neutrophils and eosinophils in whole blood in a concentration-dependent fashion. Inhibitions did not exceed 50%, even at high concentrations. The inhibition of platelet-activating factor induced shedding of Lselectin from eosinophils with a combination of rolipram and prostaglandin E 2 or isoproterenol, however, was found to be approximately 70%. Inhibition of rolling adhesion of eosinophils may, therefore, be a mode of action of type IV phosphodiesterase inhibitors.
Complement receptors on neutrophils and eosinophils play a role in activation and adhesion. During asthmatic reactions these receptors have been found elevated on circulating granulocytes. In the present study we compared the expression of CD35 (complement receptor type 1) and CD11b (complement receptor type 3) on neutrophils and eosinophils from asthmatic and non-asthmatic children. This was done in whole blood samples using depolarized light scattering for the discrimination of neutrophils and eosinophils. The non-stimulated expression as well as the upregulated expression of receptors by the chemotactic peptide N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenyl-alanine (fMLP) were studied. The results showed that without prior stimulation only the expression of CD35 on neutrophils was significantly elevated in children with asthma (P<0.05). After up-regulation with fMLP, the CD11b expression on neutrophils (P<0.005, fMLP: 0.002 microM) and eosinophils (P<0.05, fMLP: 0.02 microM) was significantly higher in asthmatic children than in the controls. These results indicate that the inducible expression of CD11b on neutrophils and eosinophils from allergic asthmatic children is primed in vivo.
The nonspecific phosphodiesterase inhibitor theophylline, widely used in asthma therapy, may cause a decrease in inflammatory responses of airways. In asthma, eosinophils migrate to the airway wall and become activated. Activated eosinophils are characterized by low cell density, as well as increased expression of CD11b and reduced expression of L-selectin, two adhesion molecules involved in transendothelial migration. To study the anti-inflammatory effect of theophylline on granulocyte adhesion molecules in vitro, the platelet-activating factor (PAF)-induced density shift was determined by density centrifugation and the modulation of CD11b and L-selectin expression by flow cytometry on eosinophils and neutrophils in human whole blood. A relatively high concentration of theophylline (10(-3) M) inhibited the increase in the percentage of hypodense eosinophils and neutrophils in whole-blood samples after PAF stimulation in vitro. A more pharmacological concentration (10(-4) M) inhibited the CD11b upregulation and L-selectin shedding induced by PAF (10(-7) M) on both eosinophils and neutrophils. The effect of isoproterenol on the inhibitory effect of theophylline was mainly additive, but a small synergistic effect could not be excluded. In conclusion theophylline can attenuate eosinophil and neutrophil activation in vitro at the level of adhesion molecule expression and changes in cell density. This may have implications for transendothelial migration of these cells in asthma.
Considerable differences in the percentage of hypodense eosinophils in the peripheral blood of asthmatics have been reported by different investigators. In these previous studies dextran sedimentation was used for removal of erythrocytes prior to density centrifugation. We hypothesized that the sedimentation procedure might induce the presence of hypodense eosinophils in the peripheral blood of asthmatic patients. In order to test this hypothesis, we compared eosinophil density profiles from peripheral blood of children with asthma and of age-matched healthy controls, using different procedures. In the first method (direct method) blood samples were directly layered on a discontinuous Percoll gradient. Erythrocytes were removed by isotonic lysis. In the second method (dextran sedimentation) erythrocytes were removed by sedimentation with dextran prior to gradient centrifugation. Results of the direct method show no significant difference in percentage of hypodense eosinophils between children with asthma and healthy controls (9.19% and 6.84% respectively). However, after dextran sedimentation, children with asthma had a significantly higher percentage of hypodense eosinophils than healthy controls (15.40% and 8.84% respectively; P < 0.05). The percentage of hypodense eosinophils was correlated with the number of eosinophils and with the lung function, measured as the Tiffeneau index (FEV1/VC), in the whole group of subjects when the direct method was used. We conclude that an increased percentage of hypodense eosinophils is not present in the circulation of children with asthma, but can be induced in vitro by dextran sedimentation. Therefore, in vitro generation of hypodense eosinophils in the blood of patients with asthma seems to be related with the primed state of eosinophils.
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