PMID: 6411152Oct 1, 1983Paper

Arachidonic acid metabolism and the adhesion of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes to cultured vascular endothelial cells.

Blood
M R BuchananM A Gimbrone

Abstract

Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) adhere to the vascular endothelial lining in vivo and to the surfaces of cultured endothelial cells in vitro, but the mechanisms of these cellular interactions remain unclear. Arachidonic acid metabolites, both cyclooxygenase- and lipoxygenase-derived, have been shown to influence PMN locomotion, secretion, and adhesion to artificial surfaces. To determine whether such mediators also are involved in regulating PMN-endothelial cell interactions, we have examined the effects of prostacyclin and various inhibitors of arachidonic acid metabolism on the adherence of radiolabeled PMN to cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells. Confluent endothelial monolayers were incubated with washed suspensions of radiolabeled human PMN (which contained less than 1% platelet contamination) at 37 degrees C for 30 min, then subjected to a standardized wash procedure and the number of adherent leukocytes determined radiometrically. Under basal conditions, i.e., in the absence of exogenous activating stimuli, 4,163 +/- 545 PMN adhered per square millimeter of endothelial surface (mean +/- SEM, n = 12). This basal adhesion (which corresponds to approximately 4-5 leukocytes per endothelial cell) was unaffected when th...Continue Reading

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