Enzyme release by bovine neutrophils
1995
Watson, G.L. | Slocombe, R.F. | Robinson, N.E. | Sleight, S.D.
Release of enzymes from cytoplasmic granules has been postulated to have a major role in neutrophil-mediated tissue injury. Secretion or release of primary granules, specific granules, and cytosolic enzymes by bovine neutrophils was examined by quantifying the release of beta-glucuronidase, B12-binding protein, and lactate dehydrogenase, respectively, in response to predetermined amounts of phorbol myristate acetate, calcium ionophore, and opsonized zymosan. These responses were compared with the enzyme release induced by exposure to live or dead, unopsonized or opsonized Pasteurella haemolytica. The greatest release of beta-glucuronidase, B12-binding protein, and lactate dehydrogenase was observed in neutrophils exposed to live organisms partially because of neutrophil lysis. Bovine neutrophils respond markedly to particulate agonists, live or dead, pathogenic or nonpathogenic, by a selective release of specific granules, an effect enhanced by opsonization. Particulate agonists induce minimal primary granule release other than that induced by cell death. Because bovine neutrophils contain quantitatively high numbers of specific granules, the high rate of secretion/ release in response to P haemolytica organisms could have a major role in the tissue responses that characterize the lesions of pneumonic pasteurellosis.
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