Phenol-Soluble Modulin alpha3 Enhances the Human Neutrophil Ly...

Collect this paper and discover other ones on Labmeeting. Learn more.
- Hide Abstract
Panton-Valentine leukocidin (PVL) has long been considered a critical toxin in severe Staphylococcus aureus infection. PVL presumably breaches the body's defense system by lysing human polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs). Recently, however, bioactive peptides- phenol-soluble modulins (PSMs)-have been proposed as the main player in the lysis of PMNs, rather than PVL. This study aimed to resolve uncertainty concerning the cause of the lysis of human PMNs by using recombinant PVL toxins and PVL-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. The recombinant PVL toxins showed strong lytic activity against human but not murine neutrophils. Moreover, the lytic activity of culture supernatants of strains USA400 MW2 and USA300 FPR3757 were completely neutralized by anti-PVL monoclonal antibodies. In contrast, phenol-soluble modulin alpha3-the most potent PSM peptide-failed to lyse human PMNs at the concentrations contained in the culture supernatants. Phenol-soluble modulin alpha3 did, however, enhance PVL-mediated lysis of human PMNs.
The Journal of infectious diseases 200(5):715-23, 2009 Sep 1Who cited this? | PubMed ID: 19653829 | Fulltext


+ Click Here for Related Papers


Join Labmeeting

  • Organize and search your PDF collection
  • Collect papers
  • Search millions of papers
  • Keep up to date with paper alerts
  • Read your papers from anywhere
  • Recommend papers to colleagues
  • Manage your lab

Join Labmeeting

Labmeeting is a web service for researchers. Sign up with your academic email address.

Individuals or corporations not affiliated with an academic institution can request a trial subscription.


Got a question?
The Labmeeting Network
has the answer.
Ask scientists at top universities like Harvard, Stanford, and MIT for their expert opinion!