4.6 Article

Clustering of urokinase receptors (uPAR; CD87) induces proinflammatory signaling in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 165, Issue 6, Pages 3341-3349

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.165.6.3341

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA42246] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL53283] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIAID NIH HHS [AI35877] Funding Source: Medline

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Leukocytes use urokinase receptors (uPAR; CD87) in adhesion, migration, and proteolysis of matrix proteins. Typically, uPAR clusters at cell-substratum interfaces, at focal adhesions, and at the leading edges of migrating cells. This study was undertaken to determine whether uPAR clustering mediates activation signaling in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils, Cells were labeled with fluo-3/AM to quantitate intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+](i)) by spectrofluorometry, and uPAR was aggregated by Ab cross-linking. Aggregating uPAR induced a highly reproducible increase in [Ca2+]i (baseline to peak) of 295 +/- 37 nM (p = 0.0002), Acutely treating cells with high m.w. urokinase (HMW-uPA; 4000 IU/ml) produced a response of similar magnitude but far shorter duration. Selectively aggregating uPA-occupied uPAR produced smaller increases in [Ca2+](i), but saturating uPAR with HMW-uPA increased the response to approximate that of uPAR cross-linking. Cross-linking uP4R induced rapid and significant increases in membrane expression of CD11b and increased degranulation (release of beta -glucuronidase and lactoferrin) to a significantly greater degree than cross-linking control Abs. The magnitude of degranulation correlated closely with the difference between baseline and peak [Ca2+](i), but was not dependent on the state of uPA occupancy. By contrast, selectively cross-linking uPA-occupied uPAR was capable of directly inducting superoxide release as well as enhancing FMLP-stimulated superoxide release. These results could not be duplicated by preferentially cross-linking unoccupied uPAR. We conclude that uPA aggregation initiates activation signaling in polymorphonuclear neutrophils through at least two distinct uPAR-dependent and uPA-independent pathways, increasing their proinflammatory potency (degranulation and oxidant release) and altering expression of CD11b/CD18 to favor a firmly adherent phenotype.

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