In vitro Leishmania major promastigote-induced macrophage migration is modulated by sensory and autonomic neuropeptides

Ahmed, AA; Wahbi, A; Nordlind, K; Kharazmi, A; Sundqvist, KG; Mutt, V; Lidén, S

HERO ID

1514911

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

1998

Language

English

PMID

9714414

HERO ID 1514911
In Press No
Year 1998
Title In vitro Leishmania major promastigote-induced macrophage migration is modulated by sensory and autonomic neuropeptides
Authors Ahmed, AA; Wahbi, A; Nordlind, K; Kharazmi, A; Sundqvist, KG; Mutt, V; Lidén, S
Journal Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
Volume 48
Issue 1
Page Numbers 79-85
Abstract Recruitment, migration and adherence of macrophages and their interaction with inoculated promastigotes are key steps in the initiation of the inflammatory process in cutaneous leishmaniasis. Parasite- and nervous system-derived factors might be involved in this process. In the present study the chemotactic activities of live, killed and sonicated Leishmania major promastigotes and of the promastigote culture supernatant as well as the L. major surface protease gp63 towards a murine macrophage cell line, Raw 264.7, were investigated, using the Boyden technique. The sensory neuropeptides SOM, CGRP and SP, and the autonomic neuropeptides VIP and NPY, were also investigated for possible modulatory effects on this chemotaxis, using the living promastigotes. Living promastigotes were the most efficient attractants for macrophages compared with other forms of the parasites. Prior incubation of the macrophages with the parasites completely abolished the chemotactic activity. This might indicate that the living promastigote chemotaxis is a receptor-mediated process. On the other hand, paraformaldehyde-killed promastigotes not only failed to induce macrophage chemotaxis but also inhibited it in comparison with the control. The surface protease gp63 tended to inhibit the macrophage chemotactic activity and the sonicate tended to stimulate it compared with controls. The culture supernatant had no effect, indicating that the chemoattractive factors putatively synthesized by the living promastigotes are not released to the surrounding medium. Somatostatin inhibited L. major promastigote-induced macrophage migration at a high concentration, 10(-6) M, while substance P inhibited it at both low concentrations, 10(-10) and 10(-9) M, and a high one, 10(-6) M, the last-mentioned having the greatest inhibitory effect. A stimulatory effect of calcitonin gene-related peptide was found at high concentrations, 10(-5) and 10(-6) M. Vasoactive intestinal peptide stimulated macrophage chemotactic activity at both a high, 10(-5) M, and at a low, 10(-9) M, concentration, the same concentration at which neuropeptide Y exerted its maximum inhibitory effect.
Doi 10.1046/j.1365-3083.1998.00380.x
Pmid 9714414
Wosid WOS:000074955500011
Url /www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Immunology; vasoactive-intestinal-peptide, murine schistosomiasis-mansoni, vascular; endothelial-cells, surface glycoprotein gp63, gene-related peptide,; human-monocytes, substance-p, polypeptide vip, lymphocytes-t, human-skin