Ligation of selectin L and integrin CD11b/ CD18 provides stimulatory signals to neutrophils which induce secretion of gelatinase B that may facilitate their transmigration into sites of inflammation.
SummaryHuman factor VIII was purified from cryoprecipitate and incubated for up to 24 hours with four neutral proteases of human blood leukocytes, namely, with elastase-like protease (ELP), chymotrypsin-like protease (CLP), collagenase and gelatinase. Electrophoretic patterns showed a reproducible sequence of degradation of factor VIII and of its 230,000 molecular weight subunit by ELP and CLP. Intermediate products were similar but those resulting from exhaustive proteolysis by ELP and CLP differed distinctly from each other. Procoagulant activity of factor VIII was rapidly and completely destroyed by ELP and CLP before visible electrophoretic changes would be detected. No increase in this activity was observed prior to its destruction. Von Willebrand factor (ristocetin cofactor) activity was considerably more resistant to ELP and CLP and declined in rough relation to degradation of highly aggregated forms of factor VIII. ELP and CLP produced a pronounced progressive increase in the Laurell reaction antigen. Normal human plasma showed a high potency to inhibit ELP and CLP. Large doses of these enzymes (300 ug per ml) produced in the plasma medium only a moderate fall in factor VIII procoagulant activity. Collagenase and gelatinase did neither degrade factor VIII nor change its biological properties.
To examine the clinical significance of neutrophil gelatinase in rheumatic diseases, plasma and synovial fluid (SF) gelatinase levels were determined in 62 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 12 patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 18 patients with osteoarthritis (OA) and 17 healthy controls. The gelatinase level was measured by enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA). The assay had a sensitivity of 1 ng/ml and a working range of 5-25 ng/ml. Gelatinase levels were significantly higher in the plasma of patients with RA and of patients with RA complicated by amyloidosis or vasculitis as compared to those of healthy controls. Moreover, the mean value of gelatinase in the plasma of patients with RA complicated by vasculitis was found to be significantly higher than that of RA patients without vasculitis. A significant increase in gelatinase concentration was also observed in the plasma of AS patients but not in the plasma of patients with OA. The concentration of gelatinase in the RA SF samples was much higher (18-fold) than the level of the enzyme in the plasma of RA patients. There was also a higher concentration of gelatinase (four-fold) in OA SF compared with OA plasma. The results suggested that circulating gelatinase may reflect some degree of neutrophil activation in patients with inflammatory arthritis, especially in those with RA complicated by vasculitis. However, the results did not allow a differentiation between chronic and acute inflammation.
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