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Surfactant protein a inhibits lipopolysaccharide-induced immune cell activation by preventing the interaction of lipopolysaccharide with lipopolysaccharide-binding protein
Authors:Stamme Cordula  Müller Mareike  Hamann Lutz  Gutsmann Thomas  Seydel Ulrich
Affiliation:Department of Immunochemistry and Biochemical Microbiology, Research Center Borstel, Center for Medicine and Bioscience, Borstel, Germany. cstamme@fz-borstel.de
Abstract:Pulmonary surfactant protein (SP)-A, an innate immune molecule, modifies lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced cell responses. Because SP-A avidly binds to the deep rough (Re) mutant of LPS, we first investigated the functional consequences of this interaction and found that preincubation of Re-LPS with SP-A significantly and in a dose-dependent manner decreased the sensitivity of rat alveolar macrophages and human mononuclear cells to Re-LPS-induced activation at limited amounts of LPS-binding protein (LBP). At high LBP concentrations, the SP-A-mediated cellular inhibition of Re-LPS-induced activation was abrogated. Because LBP-catalyzed binding of LPS to CD14 is essential for low-dose LPS-induced signaling, we then hypothesized that SP-A inhibits Re-LPS-induced immune cell activation via inhibiting the binding of Re-LPS to LBP. Binding competition experiments employing a surface plasmon resonance technique showed that Re-LPS preincubated with SP-A bound to LBP to a significantly lesser extent than Re-LPS alone. For enhanced cellular association of [(3)H]LPS/SP-A complexes to occur, the expression of membrane-bound CD14 by human embryonic kidney cells 293 was not essential. Therefore, the ability of SP-A to inhibit immune cell activation by Re-LPS may be due to its ability to block the binding of Re-LPS to LBP and prevent the initiation of the LBP/CD14 pathway for inflammatory reactions in the lung.
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