Abstract

An agonist-activated phospholipase D/phosphatidic acid phosphohydrolase (PAH) pathway was recently demonstrated in human neutrophils, and evidence suggests that phosphatidic acid (PA) and/or diradylglycerol (DG) generated from this pathway participates in activation of the O2(-)-generating respiratory burst. We have used a series of cationic amphiphilic compounds (sphingosine, propranolol, chlorpromazine, and desipramine) and antibiotics (clindamycin, trimethoprim, and roxithromycin) all of which inhibit the respiratory burst, to investigate the role of the phospholipase D/PAH pathway in neutrophil activation. The phosphatidylcholine (PC) pool in intact cells was first labeled using [3H]-1-O-alkyl-lysoPC; released [3H]-PA and [3H]-DG were then quantified after the addition of either chemo-attractant or PMA. Using either agonist, all compounds showed a dose-dependent inhibition of [3H]-DG generation which correlated with inhibition of O2- generation, but compounds failed to inhibit directly the NADPH oxidase in a cell-free system. For either activator, a plot of the ID50 values for O2- generation vs those for DG generation was linear over four orders of magnitude. In many cases, inhibition of [3H]-DG generation corresponded to an increase in [3H]-PA, implicating PAH as the locus of inhibition. Superoxide generation was inhibited under conditions where PA was either elevated or minimally affected. Neither O2- release nor DG generation showed any selectivity for stereoisomers of propranolol, suggesting that this inhibition does not act via a specific binding site on PAH. No evidence was obtained for an effect of the inhibitors on PA mobility as monitored by electron spin resonance studies of spin-labeled PA in a model membrane system. Data are consistent with an effect of the inhibitors at the level of the interaction of PAH with the membrane and/or its substrate. These data imply that DG produced via the phospholipase D/PAH pathway functions in the activation or maintenance of the respiratory burst.

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