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. 1994 Sep;214(1):242-9.
doi: 10.1006/excr.1994.1254.

Evaluation of oxidative processes in human pigment epithelial cells associated with retinal outer segment phagocytosis

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Evaluation of oxidative processes in human pigment epithelial cells associated with retinal outer segment phagocytosis

M V Miceli et al. Exp Cell Res. 1994 Sep.

Abstract

To investigate the nature of the oxidative event that occurs during phagocytosis of retinal outer segments (ROS) by cultured human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells, cells were incubated with isolated bovine ROS labeled with either the fluorescence probe carboxy-SNAFL-2 or the nonfluorescent, oxidizable probe 2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein (H2DCF). The increase in fluorescence following phagocytosis was measured by a flow cytometer. Other measurements included: oxygen consumption using a Clark-type oxygen electrode, extracellular superoxide release by superoxide dismutase inhibitable lucigenin chemiluminescence, intracellular hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production, and the effect of catalase inhibition on cellular thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) caused by phagocytosis. The activities of the enzymes NADPH oxidase and palmitoyl-CoA oxidase were also measured. H2DCF attached to bovine ROS was oxidized during phagocytosis with a time course suggesting oxidation subsequent to ROS uptake. Measurements of oxygen consumption showed a time-dependent increase of 10%, 4 h after ROS feeding, attributable to a doubling of the cyanide-resistant oxygen consumption. Intracellular H2O2 production also doubled 4 h after ROS phagocytosis. ROS uptake by RPE cells produced no significant extracellular superoxide, while extracellular superoxide production was readily demonstrated in a control macrophage cell line. Enzyme activity measurements showed that incubation of RPE cells with ROS doubled catalase activity without affecting superoxide dismutase or glutathione peroxidase activities. Inhibition of catalase during ROS uptake increased TBARS by 66%. Other enzyme activity measurements showed that human RPE cells possess both NADPH oxidase and palmitoyl-CoA oxidase activities. We conclude that ROS phagocytosis subjects RPE cells to an oxidative event on the same order of magnitude as measured in a macrophage. The event is not an extracellular macrophage-type respiratory burst and may be due to intracellular H2O2 resulting from an NADPH oxidase in the phagosome or from beta-oxidation of ROS lipids in peroxisomes. Irrespective of case, the enzyme catalase appears to be essential in protecting the RPE cell against reactive oxygen species produced during phagocytosis.

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