Epithelial cell-derived human β-defensin-2 acts as a chemotaxin for mast cells through a pertussis toxin-sensitive and phospholipase C-dependent pathway

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Abstract

Mast cells are known to accumulate at the sites of inflammation in response to chemoattractants generated in the local milieu. Since human β-defensin-2 (hBD-2) is generated in several epithelial tissues where mast cells are present and because we have recently reported that this human antibacterial peptide induces mast cell degranulation, we thus hypothesized that hBD-2 could be a mast cell chemotaxin. Here we report that hBD-2 directly and specifically induces mast cell migration with an optimal concentration of 3 μg/ml. Checkerboard analysis showed that the migration was more chemotactic rather than chemokinetic. Moreover, Scatchard analysis using 125I-labeled hBD-2 revealed that mast cells have at least two classes of receptors, high- and low-affinity receptors, for this peptide. Moreover, the competitive binding assay suggested that hBD-2 is unlikely to utilize CCR6, a functional receptor for hBD-2-mediated dendritic and T cell migration, on mast cells. In addition, treatment of mast cells with G protein inhibitor, pertussis toxin, and phospholipase C inhibitor, U-73122, abolished the cell chemotaxis in response to hBD-2, indicating that the G protein-phospholipase C signaling pathway is involved in hBD-2-induced mast cell activation. Thus, we suggest that hBD-2, which was originally believed to be involved in innate host defense, may participate in the recruitment of mast cells to inflammation foci.

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Niyonsaba, F., Iwabuchi, K., Matsuda, H., Ogawa, H., & Nagaoka, I. (2002). Epithelial cell-derived human β-defensin-2 acts as a chemotaxin for mast cells through a pertussis toxin-sensitive and phospholipase C-dependent pathway. International Immunology, 14(4), 421–426. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/14.4.421

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