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The Journal of Immunology, 1999, 162: 460-466.
Copyright © 1999 by The American Association of Immunologists

Role of the 75-kDa TNF Receptor in TNF-Induced Activation of Neutrophil Respiratory Burst1

Pietro Dri2,*, Elvira Haas{dagger}, Rita Cramer*, Renzo Menegazzi*, Chiara Gasparini*, Roberta Martinelli*, Peter Scheurich{dagger} and Pierluigi Patriarca*

* Department of Physiology and Pathology, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy, and {dagger} Institute of Cell Biology and Immunology, University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany

The exclusive role of the 55-kDa TNF receptor (TNF-R55) as the signaling receptor in TNF-induced activation of respiratory burst by human polymorphonuclear leukocytes residing on biologic surfaces has been inferred from results obtained with receptor-specific monoclonal and polyclonal Abs. In this work, we confirm this assumption by a more direct approach, i.e., by using receptor-specific TNF mutants (p55TNF and p75TNF) and, as a novel contribution, we show that cooperation of the 75-kDa TNF receptor (TNF-R75) is required for a full blown response to the cytokine. This conclusion stems from three sets of data: 1) none of the TNF-R55-specific agonists used, i.e., mAbs or p55TNF, induced a respiratory burst comparable with that induced by TNF; 2) selective down-modulation of TNF-R75 resulted in a diminished response to TNF but not to TNF-R55-specific agonists or to the chemotactic peptide FMLP; and 3) mAbs that either block or stabilize binding of TNF to TNF-R75 inhibited the response to the cytokine, suggesting that cooperation requires not only TNF binding to the receptor but also an appropriate dissociability from it. The inhibitory effect of the Abs increased as the cytokine concentrations decreased, indicating that cooperation by TNF-R75 becomes more relevant at low TNF doses. Such a cooperation does not seem to rely on the activation of a TNF-R75-linked signaling pathway independent of TNF-R55, since the response to p55TNF and p75TNF given in combination was not higher than the response to p55TNF alone. The possible mechanisms of cooperation are discussed.




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