Abstract

When phospholipases of plasma membranes are activated by certain stimuli, unsaturated fatty acids are liberated. Because unsaturated fatty acids enhance the transmembrane movement of calcium ions, the fatty acids released may modulate intracellular calcium homeostasis in various cells, including neutrophils. To determine the physiological function of these unsaturated fatty acids, we studied the effects of various fatty acids on superoxide generation and on changes in intracellular calcium contents of guinea pig neutrophils. Some unsaturated fatty acids, arachidonate and linoleate, stimulated the rate of superoxide generation concomitant with the increase in the amount of intracellular calcium. In contrast, the saturated fatty acid, myristate, stimulated the generation of superoxide without affecting the content of intracellular calcium. The stimulating actions of arachidonate and myristate were increased dramatically by the presence of a low concentration (1 microM) of extracellular calcium ion. The rate of superoxide generation in fatty acid-treated neutrophils was inhibited by chlorpromazine, an inhibitor of such calcium-binding proteins as C-kinase. These and other observations suggest that liberated unsaturated fatty acids increase the amount of intracellular calcium and enhance C-kinase activity also that the increased activity of the enzyme is involved in the chain of events leading to the stimulation of superoxide generation in fatty acid-treated neutrophils.

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