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Lysophosphatidylserine induces eosinophil extracellular trap formation and degranulation: Implications in severe asthma.

Title
Lysophosphatidylserine induces eosinophil extracellular trap formation and degranulation: Implications in severe asthma.
Author
김천
Issue Date
2020-07
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
ALLERGY, v. 75, Issue. 12, Page. 3159-3170
Abstract
Background Recent evidence demonstrates that activated eosinophils undergo a distinct form of lytic cell death, accompanied by formation of DNA-based eosinophil extracellular trap (EET) and degranulation, enhancing inflammatory immune responses in asthmatic airways. We previously showed that human blood eosinophils undergo degranulation in response to lysophosphatidylserine (LysoPS), an inflammatory lipid mediator, and strongly express P2Y10, a LysoPS receptor. Methods We evaluated EET, degranulation, and cell death of eosinophils in response to various concentrations of LysoPS. We also compared responsiveness to LysoPS between eosinophils from severe and nonsevere asthmatics. Results Extensive EET formation was elicited from a substantial fraction of stimulated eosinophils in response to 50 mu mol/L LysoPS. Analyses for LDH and eosinophil-derived neurotoxin release showed that both lytic cell death and degranulation accompanied EET formation in response to LysoPS. Cytological analyses demonstrated that citrullinated histone 3 was present in the extracellular, filamentous DNA structure embedded with eosinophil granules. The LysoPS-induced EET was independent of ROS production and irrelevant to several signaling pathways examined, but dependent on protein arginine deiminase 4. A low concentration of LysoPS (5 mu mol/L) did not induce EET or degranulation, but significantly increased platelet-activating factor-induced degranulation. Eosinophils from severe asthmatics exhibited greater degranulation, but not EET formation, in response to LysoPS (50 mu mol/L), than those from nonsevere asthmatics, along with great expression of surface P2Y10. Conclusions We identified a novel function of LysoPS, namely induction of EET in association with cytolysis and degranulation. LysoPS-dependent EET or degranulation plays a potential role in eosinophilic inflammation of severe asthma.
URI
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/all.14450https://repository.hanyang.ac.kr/handle/20.500.11754/164854
ISSN
0105-4538
DOI
10.1111/all.14450
Appears in Collections:
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND CONVERGENCE TECHNOLOGY[E](과학기술융합대학) > MOLECULAR AND LIFE SCIENCE(분자생명과학과) > Articles
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