Abstract
Human peripheral mononuclear cells responded chemotactically to 4-carboxyl-L-glutamic acid. The maximal chemotactic response occurred at 0.1 nM. No chemotactic response was found with neutrophils or fetal bovine fibroblasts. Glutamic acid, a neuroexcitatory dicarboxylic amino acid and the parent compound of 4-carboxyglutamic acid, did not stimulate chemotaxis in any of the cells tested. However, it functioned as an antagonist to 4-carboxyglutamic acid (ED50 approximately 2 pM; ED100 approximately 10 pM). In contrast to the lack of response to glutamic acid, its dicarboxylic cyclic analogue, kainic acid, excited a chemotactic response in mononuclear cells. The data suggest that mononuclear phagocytes have receptors for dicarboxylic neuroexcitatory amino acids, and we speculate that 4-carboxyglutamic acid, a tricarboxylic acid, may have a previously unrecognized role as a neuroexcitatory amino acid.
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More From: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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