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Investigating antibody-catalyzed ozone
generation by human neutrophils.
Babior
BM, Takeuchi
C, Ruedi
J, Gutierrez
A, Wentworth
P Jr.
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From www.pubmed.com
Department of Molecular and Experimental Medicine, The Skaggs Institute for
Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road,
La Jolla, CA 92037, USA. babior@scripps.edu
Recent studies have suggested that antibodies can catalyze the generation of
previously unknown oxidants including dihydrogen trioxide (H(2)O(3)) and ozone
(O(3)) from singlet oxygen ((1)O(2)(*)) and water. Given that neutrophils have
the potential both to produce (1)O(2)(*) and to bind antibodies, we considered
that these cells could be a biological source of O(3). We report here further
analytical evidence that antibody-coated neutrophils, after activation, produce
an oxidant with the chemical signature of O(3). This process is independent of
surface antibody concentration down to 50% of the resting concentration,
suggesting that surface IgG is highly efficient at intercepting the
neutrophil-generated (1)O(2)(*). Vinylbenzoic acid, an orthogonal probe for
ozone detection, is oxidized by activated neutrophils to 4-carboxybenzaldehyde
in a manner analogous to that obtained for its oxidation by ozone in solution.
This discovery of the production of such a powerful oxidant in a biological
context raises questions about not only the capacity of O(3) to kill invading
microorganisms but also its role in amplification of the inflammatory response
by signaling and gene activation.
PMID: 12601145 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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