1. We have investigated the effects of salmeterol (0.3-50 μM) on several pro-inflammatory activities of human neutrophils in vitro. 2. Oxidant production by FMLP- and calcium ionophore (A23187)-activated neutrophils was particularly sensitive to inhibition by low concentrations (0.3-3 μM) of salmeterol, while the responses of phorbol myristate acetate- and opsonised zymosan-stimulated cells were affected only by higher concentrations (3-50 μM) of the drug. At these concentrations salmeterol is not cytotoxic, nor does it act as a scavenger of superoxide. 3. These anti-oxidative interactions of salmeterol with neutrophils were insensitive to propranolol but could be eliminated by washing the cells, or by pretreatment with low concentrations (1-2 μM) of the pro-oxidative, membrane-destabilizing phospholipids, lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC), platelet activating factor (PAF) and lysoPAF (LPAF). 4. At concentrations of 6.25-50 μM salmeterol interfered with several other activities of stimulated neutrophils, including intracellular calcium fluxes, phospholipase A2 activity and synthesis of PAF. 5. In an assay of membrane-stabilizing activity, salmeterol (25 and 50 μM) neutralized the haemolytic action of LPC, PAF and LPAF. 6. Of the other commonly used β-adrenoceptor agonists, fenoterol, and formoterol, but not salbutamol, caused moderate inhibition of neutrophil oxidant generation by a superoxide-scavenging mechanism. However, unlike salmeterol, these agents possessed only weak membrane stabilizing properties. 7. We conclude that salmeterol antagonizes the pro-inflammatory, pro-oxidative activity of several bioactive lipids implicated in the pathogenesis of bronchial asthma, by a mechanism related to the membrane-stabilizing, rather than to the β-agonist properties of this agent.
CITATION STYLE
Anderson, R., Feldman, C., Theron, A. J., Ramafi, G., Cole, P. J., & Wilson, R. (1996). Anti-inflammatory, membrane-stabilizing interactions of salmeterol with human neutrophils in vitro. British Journal of Pharmacology, 117(7), 1387–1394. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.1996.tb15297.x
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