Calprotectin is an abundant cytosolic protein complex of human neutrophils with in vitro extracellular antimicrobial activity. Studies suggest that calprotectin may be actively secreted from intact HL-60 cells and that it can be translocated to polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) cell membranes. To examine whether calprotectin is secreted extracellularly, we incubated soluble and particulate stimuli, including live and heat-inactivated Candida albicans, with whole blood and measured calprotectin levels in the plasma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOral Microbiol Immunol
June 1999
The human neutrophilic protein defensins are cationic, antimicrobial, cytotoxic, corticostatic chemotactic, opsonic peptides found in azurophilic granules and constitute about 5% of the total protein in human neutrophils. In the present study, defensins were recovered from the human gingival crevice using paramagnetic microspheres (beads), coated with anti-defensin antibodies. The bead-bound defensins were assayed using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay developed in this laboratory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimicrobial peptides of several structural classes have been found in phagocytes and epithelial cells of many animals. The broadly microbicidal protegrins (PG1, -2, and -3) were originally isolated as 16 to 18-amino-acid peptides from pig neutrophil lysates, but the corresponding cDNA sequences encoded much larger precursors that belonged to the cathelicidin family of antimicrobial peptides. We explored the storage, secretion, and microbicidal activation of protegrins in porcine neutrophils and in a model system consisting of recombinant proprotegrin 3 (pPG3) and various serine proteases and their inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine if human defensins and lactoferrin, both markers of neutrophil activation, are elevated in preeclamptic plasma.
Study Design: Blood samples were obtained from 18 preeclamptic and 29 normal pregnant women in the third trimester. Demographic and clinical data were obtained from the medical record.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol
March 1995
Defensins, antimicrobial and cytotoxic peptides of neutrophils, bind to and are inactivated by blood proteins. We identified defensin interactions with alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha 1-PI), alpha 1-antichymotrypsin (alpha 1-ACT), alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP), and antithrombin III (AT III) and examined defensin binding to alpha 1-PI and alpha 1-ACT in more detail. Defensin interactions with either alpha 1-PI or alpha 1-ACT were not affected by iodoacetamide or high salt concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF