Feulner_2004_Infect.Immun_72_3171

Reference

Title : Identification of acyloxyacyl hydrolase, a lipopolysaccharide-detoxifying enzyme, in the murine urinary tract - Feulner_2004_Infect.Immun_72_3171
Author(s) : Feulner JA , Lu M , Shelton JM , Zhang M , Richardson JA , Munford RS
Ref : Infect Immun , 72 :3171 , 2004
Abstract :

Acyloxyacyl hydrolase (AOAH) is an unusual but highly conserved lipase, previously described only in myeloid cells, that removes secondary fatty acyl chains from bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and may also act on various glycero(phospho)lipids. Deacylation by AOAH greatly reduces the ability of LPS to stimulate cells via CD14-MD-2-Toll-like receptor 4. We report here that renal cortical tubule cells produce AOAH and secrete it into urine, where it can deacylate LPS. In vitro studies revealed that proximal tubule cells secrete pro-AOAH, which can be taken up by bladder cells and processed to the heterodimeric, more enzymatically active, mature form of AOAH. AOAH can then be used by the recipient cells to deacylate LPS. The enzyme produced by proximal tubule epithelium may thus be shared with downstream cells. In addition, mature AOAH is found in the urine. We suggest that cortical tubule cells may produce and secrete AOAH to limit inflammatory responses to gram-negative bacteria throughout the urinary tract.

PubMedSearch : Feulner_2004_Infect.Immun_72_3171
PubMedID: 15155618

Related information

Citations formats

Feulner JA, Lu M, Shelton JM, Zhang M, Richardson JA, Munford RS (2004)
Identification of acyloxyacyl hydrolase, a lipopolysaccharide-detoxifying enzyme, in the murine urinary tract
Infect Immun 72 :3171

Feulner JA, Lu M, Shelton JM, Zhang M, Richardson JA, Munford RS (2004)
Infect Immun 72 :3171