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. 1992 Aug 1;149(3):1016-22.

Priming of the respiratory burst of bone marrow-derived macrophages is associated with an increase in protein kinase C content

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  • PMID: 1634760

Priming of the respiratory burst of bone marrow-derived macrophages is associated with an increase in protein kinase C content

W A Phillips et al. J Immunol. .

Abstract

The biochemical mechanism(s) underlying the priming of the macrophage for an enhanced PMA-induced respiratory burst is not understood. Because the cellular receptor for PMA is thought to be protein kinase C (PKC), we have investigated the effects of priming agents on cellular PKC levels. Sonicates from unprimed bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMM) were found to contain PKC activity (309 +/- 51 pmol 32P-incorporated/mg/min; mean +/- SE, n = 17) as measured by the phospholipid-, diacylglycerol-, and calcium-dependent phosphorylation of histone. Exposure of BMM to priming agents such as TNF-alpha, LPS, and granulocyte/macrophage-CSF resulted in a significant increase in both histone-phosphorylating activity and levels of immunoreactive PKC protein in these cells. A minimum of 6-h exposure, with an increasing effect up to 48 h, was required for a detectable increase in PKC level. The activity from primed BMM, like that of the untreated cells, was predominantly cytosolic. The kinetics and concentration dependence of the priming agent-induced increase in the PKC content of BMM closely paralleled the enhancing effects of these agents on the PMA-stimulated respiratory burst. Furthermore, CSF-1, a cytokine that does not prime BMM, failed to increase PKC activity. We propose that the exposure of BMM to priming agents leads to an increase in the expression of a stimulatory isozyme(s) of PKC, resulting in an enhanced ability to mount a respiratory burst in response to stimulation with PMA.

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