Objective. Antileukoproteinase (ALP) is a physiologic inhibitor of granulocytic serine proteases. The present study was undertaken to investigate its therapeutic benefit in an antibody-transfer model of erosive polyarthritis and to elucidate its potential to interfere with immune complex-dependent inflammatory pathways.Methods. Arthritis development was induced in male (BALB/c ؋ B10.Q)F 1 mice by intravenous injection of two monoclonal antibodies specific for type II collagen and was quantified by clinical scoring and histopathology. Arthritis severity was assessed in a cohort of mice under systemic treatment with recombinant human ALP (daily doses of 0.1 mg for 5 days starting immediately after disease induction) in comparison with untreated controls. Concomitantly, functional assays (phagocytosis, oxidative burst, fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of integrin expression) were performed on neutrophils upon in vitro stimulation by IgG-coated latex beads.Results. ALP treatment reduced arthritis incidence and severity and had a protective effect against cartilage and bone erosion. ALP inhibited the conversion of the leukocyte 2 integrins into an active conformation upon Fc receptor stimulation of granulocytes. ALP bound to the actin-bundling protein L-plastin and down-modulated filamentous actin assembly in response to stimulation with IgG-coated latex beads in granulocytes. ALP exerted additional inhibitory effects on neutrophil functions associated with cytoskeletal reorganization, such as phagocytosis and oxidative burst.Conclusion. In addition to its antiprotease activity, ALP exerts a variety of blocking effects on neutrophil functions, probably due to modulation of cytoskeletal changes, that may contribute to this inhibitor's antiarthritis potential and qualify it as a multifunctional regulator of inflammatory responses.Antileukoproteinase (ALP), also named secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor for its presence in epithelial secretions and its ability to inhibit neutrophil serine protease, is a highly basic, acid-stable polypeptide. It comprises two mutually homologous highly disulfidebonded domains connected by a short linker (1). ALP circulates in blood, and experimental evidence indicates its physiologic expression by a variety of mucosal epithelial cells, by neutrophils (2), and by murine, but not human, macrophages (3). However, its low molecular weight (11 kd) and its cationic nature (pI Ͼ10) predispose ALP to leaving the circulation for specific accumulation in tissues, especially in cartilage (4,5).In addition to its antiproteolytic properties, ALP has been shown to exert a variety of antiinflammatory actions on macrophages and neutrophils (e.g., the suppression of lipopolysaccharide [LPS]-induced prostaglandin E 2 and matrix metalloproteinase production or