Publication | Closed Access
all-trans-Retinal stimulates superoxide release and phospholipase C activity in neutrophils without significantly blocking protein kinase C.
34
Citations
30
References
1986
Year
Ocular DiseaseImmunologyCellular PhysiologyOxidative StressInflammationRetinaSuperoxide ReleaseInositol PhosphatesCell SignalingProtein Kinase COphthalmologyVascular BiologyC ActivityCell BiologyOcular TissueGuinea Pig NeutrophilsSignal TransductionExperimental OphthalmologyPhysiologyGlaucomaMedicineExtracellular Matrix
all-trans-Retinal was previously shown to stimulate high levels of superoxide release by guinea pig neutrophils. When the cells, previously labeled with [3H]inositol, are treated with all-trans-retinal, they exhibit a decrease in the levels of [3H]inositol phospholipids and an increase in the accumulation of [3H]inositol phosphates. The maximal accumulation of inositol phosphates and the optimal rate of superoxide release occurred together at approximately 7 min after stimulation. The levels of [3H]inositol phosphates accumulated were comparable to those observed when the cells were stimulated with a chemotactic peptide. In direct measurements, using concentrations that stimulate intact cells maximally, all-trans-retinal was found not to inhibit protein kinase C from the cytosol of neutrophils significantly. This contrasts with the situation with this kinase obtained from other sources. These observations represent additional effects of vitamin A on cells.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1