Abstract
The guinea pig C-C chemokine, eotaxin, is a potent and selective eosinophil chemoattractant in guinea pig airways and skin in vivo, and stimulates both guinea pig and human eosinophils in vitro. The human C-C chemokine RANTES (30% homology with guinea pig eotaxin) stimulates human eosinophils in vitro, but does not stimulate guinea pig eosinophils, even though these cells bind 125I-RANTES. Similar concentrations of eotaxin and unlabeled RANTES competitively inhibit the binding of 125I-RANTES to guinea pig eosinophils, suggesting that eotaxin and RANTES share a common binding site on these cells. In the present study, we investigated the possibility that human RANTES, binding to a putative eotaxin receptor on guinea pig eosinophils, might block functional responses to eotaxin. When fura-2-loaded cells were first exposed to RANTES, which failed to elevate the intracellular calcium concentration, the response to a subsequent challenge with eotaxin was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner. Inhibition was also demonstrated when the two chemokines were added simultaneously. Another human C-C chemokine, MCP-3 (52% homology with guinea pig eotaxin), had similar inhibitory effects on the eotaxin-induced activation of guinea pig eosinophils in vitro. RANTES inhibited (111)In-eosinophil accumulation in response to intradermal eotaxin in vivo. In contrast, RANTES had no significant effect on responses to leukotriene B4 in vitro or in vivo. Thus, these experiments in the guinea pig demonstrate that human RANTES is the first prototypic antagonist of an eotaxin receptor.
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