| Literature DB >> 8023744 |
E J Miller1, A Kurdowska, S Nagao, F K Carr, S Hayashi, M A Atkinson, A B Cohen.
Abstract
Interleukin-8 (IL-8) is a peptide which is secreted by stimulated human monocytes and which is chemotactic for human neutrophils. We synthesized three overlapping peptides spanning the amino-terminal region of the IL-8 sequence. None of the peptides retained the chemotactic activity of the native molecule. One of the peptides, IL-8(3-25), inhibited the neutrophil chemotactic activity of recombinant IL-8 (rIL-8) which had been preheated to 40 degrees C but did not reduce neutrophil chemokinesis, or the chemotactic activity of unheated rIL-8, FMLP, C5a or LTB4. Interleukin-8 exhibited similar binding kinetics and chemotaxis for neutrophils regardless of whether it had been pretreated at 40 degrees C. In addition, IL-8(3-25) was also able to decrease the binding of preheated IL-8 to neutrophils. IL-8(3-25), which can self-associate, binds directly to receptors on the neutrophil. The data suggest that heat-treated, but not untreated, IL-8 causes the IL-8(3-25) multimers to disaggregate, allowing the monomeric peptide to directly bind to the IL-8 receptor and thus inhibiting IL-8/receptor binding.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8023744 DOI: 10.1007/bf01984062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Agents Actions ISSN: 0065-4299