Cytosolic free Ca2+ changes and calpain activation are required for β integrin–accelerated phagocytosis by human neutrophils
Open Access
- 14 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 159 (1) , 181-189
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200206089
Abstract
Phagocytosis of microbes coated with opsonins such as the complement component C3bi is the key activity of neutrophils. However, the mechanism by which opsonins enhance the rate of phagocytosis by these cells is unknown and has been difficult to study, partly because of the problem of observing and quantifying the events associated with phagocytosis. In this study, C3bi-opsonized particles were presented to neutrophils with a micromanipulator, so that the events of binding, pseudopod cup formation, engulfment, and completion of phagocytosis were clearly defined and distinguished from those involved with chemotaxis. Using this approach in combination with simultaneous phase contrast and Ca2+ imaging, the temporal relationship between changes in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration and phagocytosis were correlated. Here we show that whereas small, localized Ca2+ changes occur at the site of particle attachment and cup formation as a result of store release, rapid engulfment of the particle required a global change in cytosolic free Ca2+ which resulted from Ca2+ influx. This latter rise in cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration also liberated a fraction of β2 integrin receptors which were initially immobile on the neutrophil surface, as demonstrable by both fluorescence recovery after laser bleaching and by visualization of localized β2 integrin labelling. Inhibitors of calpain activation prevented both the Ca2+-induced liberation of β2 integrin and the rapid stage of phagocytosis, despite the persistence of the global Ca2+ signal. Therefore, we propose that Ca2+ activation of calpain causes β2 integrin liberation, and that this signal plays a key role in the acceleration of β2 integrin–mediated phagocytosis.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Calreticulin and calnexin in the endoplasmic reticulum are important for phagocytosisThe EMBO Journal, 2001
- High Micromolar Ca2+beneath the Plasma Membrane in Stimulated NeutrophilsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1998
- Complementary Roles for Receptor Clustering and Conformational Change in the Adhesive and Signaling Functions of Integrin αIIbβ3The Journal of cell biology, 1998
- LFA-1–mediated Adhesion Is Regulated by Cytoskeletal Restraint and by a Ca2+-dependent Protease, CalpainThe Journal of cell biology, 1998
- Redistribution of intracellular Ca2+ stores during phagocytosis in human neutrophilsScience, 1994
- Calcium signaling capacity of the integrin on human neutrophilsExperimental Cell Research, 1991
- Multiple elevations of cytosolic-free Ca2+ in human neutrophils: initiation by adherence receptors of the integrin family.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Oxidase activation in individual neutrophils is dependent on the onset and magnitude of the Ca2+ signalCell Calcium, 1990
- Local and global changes in cytosolic free calcium in neutrophils during chemotaxis and phagocytosisCell Calcium, 1990
- Synthesis of a new cell penetrating calpain inhibitor (calpeptin)Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1988