Taurine Chloramine Inhibits Leukocyte Migration by Suppressing Actin Polymerization and Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase

Citations

SCOPUS

3

초록

Taurine, one of the most abundant amino acids, is ubiquitously distributed in mammalian tissues and is known to react with myeloperoxidase-derived hypochlorous acid (HOCl/OCl-) to produce taurine chloramine (Tau-Cl), which prevents inflammation by both suppressing pro-inflammatory mediators and increasing antioxidant levels. The migration of inflammatory cells, including neutrophils and macrophages, to infection sites is critical to the development of inflammation. In the present study, we investigated whether Tau-Cl suppresses the migration of inflammatory cells. Tau-Cl inhibited thioglycollate-induced leukocyte migration to the peritoneal cavity, as well as both fMLP-induced neutrophil migration and LPS-stimulated macrophage migration in a transwell system. Tau-Cl also inhibited LPS-induced actin polymerization, adhesion, and ERK phosphorylation in macrophages. Together, these findings suggest that Tau-Cl inhibits the infiltration of inflammatory cells into infection sites by inhibiting ERK activation, thereby preventing actin polymerization, and thus, the excessive infiltration of inflammatory cells, which can cause chronic inflammation. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

키워드

Actin polymerizationInflammationMacrophagesMigrationNeutrophilsTaurine chloramine
제목
Taurine Chloramine Inhibits Leukocyte Migration by Suppressing Actin Polymerization and Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase
저자
Kim, Hyun JaeKang, In SoonKim, Chaekyun
DOI
10.1007/978-3-030-93337-1_5
발행일
2022
유형
Book chapter
저널명
Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
1370
페이지
51 ~ 61