AI Article Synopsis

  • Monocytes in blood leukocyte preparations generate a chemotactic factor, neutrophil-activating peptide-2 (NAP-2), that attracts neutrophils.
  • The presence of platelets and serine protease inhibitors influences the production of NAP-2 and its effect on neutrophils' chemotactic response.
  • Once activated, neutrophils can create a sustained chemotactic gradient, leading to excessive attraction of more neutrophils due to the absence of regulatory factors in EDTA/plasma that typically modulate this response.

Article Abstract

In slide preparations of human blood leukocytes in autologous plasma containing EDTA, many adherent monocytes are initially chemotactic for neutrophils (PMN). We have identified the chemotactic factor that they generate as neutrophil-activating peptide-2 (NAP-2), as evidenced by distraction of the gradient by authentic human NAP-2, the importance of platelets in the media, which elaborate the precursor of NAP-2, and suppression of the chemotactic response by serine protease inhibitors, which would block the monocyte-derived serine esterase that creates NAP-2 from its immediate precursor. Consistent with this conclusion is inhibition of the chemotactic response to monocytes by agents that block CXCR2, the receptor that NAP-2 uses. Later, when the monocyte moves from the center of chemoattraction, the activated PMN themselves, whose own chemotactic properties are enhanced in EDTA/plasma, appear to take over generation of the gradient, resulting in a prolonged ingress of PMN from outside the field ("second wave"). Chemoattraction by monocytes seems to be simply one way of stimulating the PMN, which, once activated, fail in EDTA/plasma to efficiently shut off their own chemoattraction for other PMN. We suggest that these exaggerated chemotactic effects are due to the loss of normal modulation by a regulatory factor(s) designed to keep the chemotactic response from getting out of hand-i.e., a tonic inhibitor of chemotaxis in plasma.

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