Macrophage recognition of thiol-group oxidized cells: Recognition of carbohydrate chains by macrophage surface nucleolin as apoptotic cells

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Abstract

The mechanism was investigated for macrophage recognition of cells oxidized by diamide, a thiol groupspecific oxidizing reagent. Jurkat cells exposed to various concentrations of diamide were recognized by macrophages, the cells exposed to 25PdblM diamide being best recognized. CD43, a major glycoprotein on the Jurkat cell surface, tended to form clusters upon diamide oxidization, and pretreating Jurkat cells with the anti-CD43 antibody inhibited macrophage binding. This indicates that macrophages appeared to recognize CD43. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and a Western blot analysis of CD43 of the diamide-oxidized cells showed no increase in the amount of cross-linked CD43 compared with control cells, indicating that cross-linking of CD43 by a disulphide bond was not involved in the clustering. Both CD43 clustering and binding of the oxidized cells to macrophages was prevented by the caspase inhibitor, benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp (OMe) fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD-fmk), suggesting that the oxidized and macrophage-bound cells were undergoing apoptosis. A closer examination revealed that the caspase-3 activity, chromatin condensation, and DNA fragmentation in Jurkat cells were all increased by oxidation. The macrophage receptor involved in the binding appeared to be the cell-surface protein, nucleolin; an antinucleolin antibody treatment inhibited the binding. These results suggest that thiol group-oxidized cells underwent early apoptosis and were recognized by nucleolin on macrophages as early apoptotic cells.

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Miki, Y., Hirano, K., & Beppu, M. (2012). Macrophage recognition of thiol-group oxidized cells: Recognition of carbohydrate chains by macrophage surface nucleolin as apoptotic cells. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 76(11), 2068–2074. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.120413

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