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1 Department of Haematology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom
2 Department of Medical Microbiology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom
3 School of Applied Sciences, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff, Cardiff, United Kingdom
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: tonksa{at}cf.ac.uk.
Pulmonary surfactant phospholipids have been shown previously to regulate inflammatory functions of human monocytes. This study was undertaken to delineate the
mechanisms by which pulmonary surfactant modulates the respiratory burst in a human monocytic cell line, MonoMac-6 (MM6). Preincubation of MM6 cells with the surfactant
preparations Survanta®, Curosurf® or Exosurf Neonatal TM inhibited the oxidative response to either lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and zymosan or phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) by up to 50% (P<0.01). Preincubation of MM6 cells and human peripheral blood monocytes with dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC), the major phospholipid component of surfactant,
inhibited the oxidative response to zymosan. DPPC did not directly affect the activity of the NADPH oxidase in a MM6 reconstituted cell system, suggesting that DPPC does not affect the assembly of the individual components of this enzyme into a functional unit. The effects of
DPPC were evaluated on both LPS/zymosan and PMA activation of Protein Kinase C (PKC), a ubiquitous intracellular kinase, in MM6 cells. We found that DPPC significantly inhibited the activity of PKC in stimulated cells by 70% (P<0.01). Western blotting experiments demonstrated
that DPPC was able to attenuate the activation of the PKC
isoform but not PKC
. These results suggest that DPPC, the major component of pulmonary surfactant, plays a role in modulating leukocyte inflammatory responses in the lung via down regulation of PKC, a mechanism that may involve the PKC
isoform.
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