Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation

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Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation. / Kenne, Ellinor; Rasmuson, Joel; Renné, Thomas; Vieira, Monica L; Müller-Esterl, Werner; Herwald, Heiko; Lindbom, Lennart.

In: FASEB J, Vol. 33, No. 2, 02.2019, p. 2599-2609.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kenne, E, Rasmuson, J, Renné, T, Vieira, ML, Müller-Esterl, W, Herwald, H & Lindbom, L 2019, 'Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation', FASEB J, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 2599-2609. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201801329R

APA

Kenne, E., Rasmuson, J., Renné, T., Vieira, M. L., Müller-Esterl, W., Herwald, H., & Lindbom, L. (2019). Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation. FASEB J, 33(2), 2599-2609. https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.201801329R

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{f35f56070fc74d3cbbd342c391155bff,
title = "Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation",
abstract = "Neutrophil recruitment and plasma exudation are key elements in the immune response to injury or infection. Activated neutrophils stimulate opening of the endothelial barrier; however, the underlying mechanisms have remained largely unknown. In this study, we identified a pivotal role of the proinflammatory kallikrein-kinin system and consequent formation of bradykinin in neutrophil-evoked vascular leak. In mouse and hamster models of acute inflammation, inhibitors of bradykinin generation, and signaling markedly reduced plasma exudation in response to chemoattractant activation of neutrophils. The neutrophil-driven leak was likewise suppressed in mice deficient in either the bradykinin B2 receptor or factor XII (initiator of the kallikrein-kinin system). In human endothelial cell monolayers, material secreted from activated neutrophils induced cytoskeletal rearrangement, leading to paracellular gap formation in a bradykinin-dependent manner. As a mechanistic basis, we found that a neutrophil-derived heparin-binding protein (HBP/azurocidin) displaced the bradykinin precursor high-molecular-weight kininogen from endothelial cells, thereby enabling proteolytic processing of kininogen into bradykinin by neutrophil and plasma proteases. These data provide novel insight into the signaling pathway by which neutrophils open up the endothelial barrier and identify the kallikrein-kinin system as a target for therapeutic interventions in acute inflammatory reactions.-Kenne, E., Rasmuson, J., Renn{\'e}, T., Vieira, M. L., M{\"u}ller-Esterl, W., Herwald, H., Lindbom, L. Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Ellinor Kenne and Joel Rasmuson and Thomas Renn{\'e} and Vieira, {Monica L} and Werner M{\"u}ller-Esterl and Heiko Herwald and Lennart Lindbom",
year = "2019",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1096/fj.201801329R",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "2599--2609",
journal = "FASEB J",
issn = "0892-6638",
publisher = "FASEB",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation

AU - Kenne, Ellinor

AU - Rasmuson, Joel

AU - Renné, Thomas

AU - Vieira, Monica L

AU - Müller-Esterl, Werner

AU - Herwald, Heiko

AU - Lindbom, Lennart

PY - 2019/2

Y1 - 2019/2

N2 - Neutrophil recruitment and plasma exudation are key elements in the immune response to injury or infection. Activated neutrophils stimulate opening of the endothelial barrier; however, the underlying mechanisms have remained largely unknown. In this study, we identified a pivotal role of the proinflammatory kallikrein-kinin system and consequent formation of bradykinin in neutrophil-evoked vascular leak. In mouse and hamster models of acute inflammation, inhibitors of bradykinin generation, and signaling markedly reduced plasma exudation in response to chemoattractant activation of neutrophils. The neutrophil-driven leak was likewise suppressed in mice deficient in either the bradykinin B2 receptor or factor XII (initiator of the kallikrein-kinin system). In human endothelial cell monolayers, material secreted from activated neutrophils induced cytoskeletal rearrangement, leading to paracellular gap formation in a bradykinin-dependent manner. As a mechanistic basis, we found that a neutrophil-derived heparin-binding protein (HBP/azurocidin) displaced the bradykinin precursor high-molecular-weight kininogen from endothelial cells, thereby enabling proteolytic processing of kininogen into bradykinin by neutrophil and plasma proteases. These data provide novel insight into the signaling pathway by which neutrophils open up the endothelial barrier and identify the kallikrein-kinin system as a target for therapeutic interventions in acute inflammatory reactions.-Kenne, E., Rasmuson, J., Renné, T., Vieira, M. L., Müller-Esterl, W., Herwald, H., Lindbom, L. Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation.

AB - Neutrophil recruitment and plasma exudation are key elements in the immune response to injury or infection. Activated neutrophils stimulate opening of the endothelial barrier; however, the underlying mechanisms have remained largely unknown. In this study, we identified a pivotal role of the proinflammatory kallikrein-kinin system and consequent formation of bradykinin in neutrophil-evoked vascular leak. In mouse and hamster models of acute inflammation, inhibitors of bradykinin generation, and signaling markedly reduced plasma exudation in response to chemoattractant activation of neutrophils. The neutrophil-driven leak was likewise suppressed in mice deficient in either the bradykinin B2 receptor or factor XII (initiator of the kallikrein-kinin system). In human endothelial cell monolayers, material secreted from activated neutrophils induced cytoskeletal rearrangement, leading to paracellular gap formation in a bradykinin-dependent manner. As a mechanistic basis, we found that a neutrophil-derived heparin-binding protein (HBP/azurocidin) displaced the bradykinin precursor high-molecular-weight kininogen from endothelial cells, thereby enabling proteolytic processing of kininogen into bradykinin by neutrophil and plasma proteases. These data provide novel insight into the signaling pathway by which neutrophils open up the endothelial barrier and identify the kallikrein-kinin system as a target for therapeutic interventions in acute inflammatory reactions.-Kenne, E., Rasmuson, J., Renné, T., Vieira, M. L., Müller-Esterl, W., Herwald, H., Lindbom, L. Neutrophils engage the kallikrein-kinin system to open up the endothelial barrier in acute inflammation.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1096/fj.201801329R

DO - 10.1096/fj.201801329R

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30281335

VL - 33

SP - 2599

EP - 2609

JO - FASEB J

JF - FASEB J

SN - 0892-6638

IS - 2

ER -