Transforming growth factor beta 1, a potent chemoattractant for human neutrophils, bypasses classic signal-transduction pathways

  1. J Reibman,
  2. S Meixler,
  3. T C Lee,
  4. L I Gold,
  5. B N Cronstein,
  6. K A Haines,
  7. S L Kolasinski, and
  8. G Weissmann
  1. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, New York University Medical Center, NY 10016.

Abstract

Transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), a homodimeric polypeptide (Mr 25,000), derives from inflammatory cells and acts as a chemoattractant for monocytes and fibroblasts. We report here that TGF-beta 1 is also the most potent chemoattractant yet described for human peripheral blood neutrophils. Recombinant TGF-beta 1 elicited dose-dependent directed migration of neutrophils under agarose that was inhibited in the presence of a neutralizing antibody to TGF-beta 1. Maximal chemotaxis was evoked by TGF-beta 1 at femtomolar concentrations, whereas conventional chemoattractants act at nanomolar concentrations: on a molar basis, TGF-beta 1 was 150,000 times more potent than fMet-Leu-Phe. In contrast, TGF-beta 1 provoked neither exocytosis nor the production of superoxide by neutrophils. We further analyzed the mechanism by which TGF-beta 1 elicits chemotaxis (GTPase activity, [Ca2+], and actin polymerization). In contrast to the conventional chemoattractant fMet-Leu-Phe, TGF-beta neither activated classic heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding proteins nor provoked global mobilization of intracellular Ca2+. Chemoattraction by both fMet-Leu-Phe and TGF-beta 1 was inhibited by cycloheximide and actinomycin D. Moreover, chemotaxis in response to TGF-beta 1 was associated with the polymerization of actin. The selectivity and potency of TGF-beta 1 as a chemoattractant suggest that it elicits directed cell migration by means of a pathway that depends not on classic intracellular signals but on protein synthesis.

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