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New role for 15-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid. Activator of leukotriene biosynthesis in PT-18 mast/basophil cells.

109

Citations

20

References

1982

Year

Abstract

Leukotrienes are vasoactive arachidonic acid metabolites which are released by mast cells during hypersensitivity reactions. The mechanisms for regulating leukotriene biosynthesis are not well understood. A murine mast/basophil cell line (PT-18) was used to investigate this problem. Exogenously supplied [14C]arachidonic acid is not appreciably converted to leukotrienes by untreated PT-18 cells. However, when the cells were preincubated with the lymphocyte product 15-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (15-HETE), addition of [14C]arachidonic acid consistently resulted in a dose-dependent synthesis of large amounts of both [14C]leukotriene B4 and [14C]5-HETE. These metabolites were isolated by high pressure liquid chromatography, converted to the methyl ester trimethylsilyl ether derivatives, and the structures confirmed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. These findings indicate that 15-HETE induces a direct activation of a cryptic 5-lipoxygenase in these cells. The closely related 12-HETE was ineffective. The activation phenomenon occurs rapidly and is reversible. Furthermore, the activation appears to be highly cell- and enzyme-specific, since lipoxygenases in three primary cell types including one that contains a 5-lipoxygenase and six other cell lines did not show this specific induction of leukotriene biosynthesis by 15-HETE. This report is the first evidence that 15-HETE, a major arachidonate metabolite in lymphocytes, can act as a signal to activate leukotriene production by susceptible mast cells.

References

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