4.6 Article

Impaired P2X1 Receptor-Mediated Adhesion in Eosinophils from Asthmatic Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 196, Issue 12, Pages 4877-4884

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501585

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Leicester
  2. Institute for Lung Health
  3. National Institute for Health Research Leicester Respiratory Biomedical Research Unit
  4. National Institute for Health Research Senior Fellowship
  5. Airway Disease Predicting Outcomes through Patient Specific Computational Modelling project (European Union Seventh Framework Programme grant)
  6. National Institute for Health Research [PDF-2013-06-052, NF-SI-0512-10030] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Eosinophils play an important role in the pathogenesis of asthma and can be activated by extracellular nucleotides released following cell damage or inflammation. For example, increased ATP concentrations were reported in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids of asthmatic patients. Although eosinophils are known to express several subtypes of P2 receptors for extracellular nucleotides, their function and contribution to asthma remain unclear. In this article, we show that transcripts for P2X1, P2X4, and P2X5 receptors were expressed in healthy and asthmatic eosinophils. The P2X receptor agonist alpha,beta-methylene ATP (alpha,beta-meATP; 10 mu M) evoked rapidly activating and desensitizing inward currents (peak 18 +/- 3 pA/pF at -60 mV) in healthy eosinophils, typical of P2X1 homomeric receptors, which were abolished by the selective P2X1 antagonist NF449 (1 mu M) (3 +/- 2 pA/pF). alpha,beta-meATP-evoked currents were smaller in eosinophils from asthmatic patients (8 +/- 2 versus 27 +/- 5 pA/pF for healthy) but were enhanced following treatment with a high concentration of the nucleotidase apyrase (17 +/- 5 pA/pF for 10 IU/ml and 11 +/- 3 pA/pF for 0.32 IU/ml), indicating that the channels are partially desensitized by extracellular nucleotides. alpha,beta-meATP (10 mu M) increased the expression of CD11b activated form in eosinophils from healthy, but not asthmatic, donors (143 +/- 21% and 108 +/- 11% of control response, respectively). Furthermore, alpha,beta-meATP increased healthy (18 +/- 2% compared with control 10 +/- 1%) but not asthmatic (13 +/- 1% versus 10 +/- 0% for control) eosinophil adhesion. Healthy human eosinophils express functional P2X1 receptors whose activation leads to eosinophil alpha(M)beta(2) integrin-dependent adhesion. P2X1 responses are constitutively reduced in asthmatic compared with healthy eosinophils, probably as the result of an increase in extracellular nucleotide concentration.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available