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Differential effect of plant lectins on mast cells of different origins

Abstract

Histamine release induced by plant lectins was studied with emphasis on the carbohydrate specificity, external calcium requirement, metal binding sites, and mast cell heterogeneity and on the importance of antibodies bound to the mast cell membrane to the lectin effect. Peritoneal mast cells were obtained by direct lavage of the rat peritoneal cavity and guinea pig intestine and hamster cheek pouch mast cells were obtained by dispersion with collagenase type IA. Histamine release was induced with concanavalin A (Con A), lectins from Canavalia brasiliensis, mannose-specific Cymbosema roseum, Maackia amurensis, Parkia platycephala, Triticum vulgaris (WGA), and demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis, using 1-300 µg/ml lectin concentrations applied to Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells, peaking on 26.9, 21.0, 29.1, 24.9, 17.2, 10.7, 19.9, and 41.5%, respectively. This effect was inhibited in the absence of extracellular calcium. The lectins were also active on hamster cheek pouch mast cells (except demetallized Con A) and on Rowett nude rat (animal free of immunoglobulins) peritoneal mast cells (except for mannose-specific C. roseum, P. platycephala and WGA). No effect was observed in guinea pig intestine mast cells. Glucose-saturated Con A and C. brasiliensis also released histamine from Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells. These results suggest that histamine release induced by lectins is influenced by the heterogeneity of mast cells and depends on extracellular calcium. The results also suggest that this histamine release might occur by alternative mechanisms, because the usual mechanism of lectins is related to their binding properties to metals from which depend the binding to sugars, which would be their sites to bind to immunoglobulins. In the present study, we show that the histamine release by lectins was also induced by demetallized lectins and by sugar-saturated lectins (which would avoid their binding to other sugars). Additionally, the lectins also released histamine from Rowett nude mast cells that are free of immunoglobulins.

Mast cells; Histamine; Plant lectins


Braz J Med Biol Res, June 2005, Volume 38(06) 935-941

Differential effect of plant lectins on mast cells of different origins

F.C. Lopes1, B.S. Cavada2, V.P.T. Pinto2, A.H. Sampaio2 and J.C. Gomes1

1Departamento de Farmacologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Botucatu, SP, Brasil

2Departamento de Bioquímica e Biologia Molecular, Universidade Federal do Ceará, Fortaleza, CE, Brasil

References

Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes Correspondence and Footnotes

Abstract

Histamine release induced by plant lectins was studied with emphasis on the carbohydrate specificity, external calcium requirement, metal binding sites, and mast cell heterogeneity and on the importance of antibodies bound to the mast cell membrane to the lectin effect. Peritoneal mast cells were obtained by direct lavage of the rat peritoneal cavity and guinea pig intestine and hamster cheek pouch mast cells were obtained by dispersion with collagenase type IA. Histamine release was induced with concanavalin A (Con A), lectins from Canavalia brasiliensis, mannose-specific Cymbosema roseum, Maackia amurensis, Parkia platycephala, Triticum vulgaris (WGA), and demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis, using 1-300 µg/ml lectin concentrations applied to Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells, peaking on 26.9, 21.0, 29.1, 24.9, 17.2, 10.7, 19.9, and 41.5%, respectively. This effect was inhibited in the absence of extracellular calcium. The lectins were also active on hamster cheek pouch mast cells (except demetallized Con A) and on Rowett nude rat (animal free of immunoglobulins) peritoneal mast cells (except for mannose-specific C. roseum, P. platycephala and WGA). No effect was observed in guinea pig intestine mast cells. Glucose-saturated Con A and C. brasiliensis also released histamine from Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells. These results suggest that histamine release induced by lectins is influenced by the heterogeneity of mast cells and depends on extracellular calcium. The results also suggest that this histamine release might occur by alternative mechanisms, because the usual mechanism of lectins is related to their binding properties to metals from which depend the binding to sugars, which would be their sites to bind to immunoglobulins. In the present study, we show that the histamine release by lectins was also induced by demetallized lectins and by sugar-saturated lectins (which would avoid their binding to other sugars). Additionally, the lectins also released histamine from Rowett nude mast cells that are free of immunoglobulins.

Key words: Mast cells, Histamine, Plant lectins

Introduction

Lectins are proteins of non-immune origin that bind to carbohydrates and sugar-containing substances in a specific and reversible way or precipitate glycoconjugates (1). This characteristic enables lectins to interact with a variety of mammalian cells, altering their intracellular metabolism and producing several biological effects, such as activation of lymphocytes (2,3), platelets (4), basophils, and mast cells (5-8). Concanavalin A (Con A) is a glucose/mannose-specific lectin that becomes active only when the metal-binding sites are occupied (2,3,9). Keller (5) first reported that

Con A could induce histamine release from rat mast cells harvested from animals previously infected with the worm Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. The absence of an effect on cells from parasite-free animals, as well as temperature dependence and inhibition induced by high carbohydrate concentrations, indicate a mechanism similar to antigen-antibody reaction, possibly due to a cross-link of Fc regions of the immunoglobulin molecule. However, there is evidence that the histamine release induced by lectins can also occur through direct interaction with mast cell membrane receptors (6). A calcium requirement is another controversial point. Some papers (7,10-12) have reported dependence on external calcium, whereas others (8,13) have reported histamine release in the absence of calcium. Con A induces histamine release from rat, mouse, hamster, guinea pig, rabbit, and human mast cells (14), although the percentage of histamine released differs depending on the specie or tissue studied (15-18).

The objective of the present investigation was to study the histamine release induced by plant lectins (Table 1), focusing on: carbohydrate specificity, external calcium requirement, importance of metal-binding sites, mast cell heterogeneity, and the importance of antibodies bound to the mast cell membrane.

Material and Methods

Animals and sensitization

Male Wistar rats (250-280 g), hamsters (80-115 g), and Dunkin-Hartley guinea pigs (280-350 g) of both sexes were sensitized with ovalbumin (1 ml of a solution containing 10 mg plus 100 mg aluminum hydroxide in saline) by subcutaneous (rats and hamsters) and intraperitoneal (guinea pigs) injections. The animals were used 21 to 51 days after sensitization. Six-week-old Rowett nude rats of both sexes were purchased from CEMIB-UNICAMP (Campinas, SP, Brazil). The experimental protocol used followed the ethical principles for animal research adopted by the Brazilian College of Animal Experimentation (COBEA) and was approved by the Ethics Committee for Animal Experimentation of the Institute of Bioscience, UNESP, Botucatu, SP, Brazil.

Cell suspensions

Rat peritoneal cell suspensions were obtained by lavage of the peritoneal cavity with 30 ml Tyrode solution (137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 1 mM CaCl2, 0.4 mM NaH2PO4, 12 mM NaHCO3, and 5.6 mM glucose), pH 7.4, containing heparin (5 units/ml). The cells were recovered by centrifugation at 150 g, 22ºC, for 5 min and washed twice in Tyrode solution.

Hamster cheek pouch cell suspensions were obtained by dispersion with collagenase type IA as described previously (19). To prepare the guinea pig intestine cell suspensions the small intestine was removed from the animal and internally washed with Tyrode, the Peyer's patches were removed and discarded, 1-cm fragments were placed in a beaker containing 200 ml Tyrode and constantly shaken for 20 min to remove the mucus. The procedure was repeated three times. Smaller fragments were cut (1-2 mm3) and incubated twice for 60 min each time with collagenase type IA using essentially the same method as for the hamster cheek pouch. The animals were killed with an overdose of ether. Cell suspensions presenting more than 15% spontaneous histamine release were discarded.

Incubations

Samples (500 µl) were pre-incubated in 10-ml glass tubes for 5 min to equilibrate the temperature (37ºC) before the addition of the compounds in a total volume never exceeding 60 µl. After incubation, the reactions were stopped by the addition of 1 ml Tyrode at 4ºC and the samples were centrifuged at 150 g, 4ºC, for 5 min. The supernatants were poured into clean tubes, and equal volumes of Tyrode were added to the cell pellets. Perchloric acid at a final concentration of 0.4 M was added to all tubes.

Determination of histamine release

Histamine release was determined fluorometrically (20) with an automatic modular continuous flow system (21) using a sample collector (Technicon sampler IV, Tarrytown, NY, USA), a multi-channel peristaltic pump (Technicon pump III), an extraction module, a fluorometer (Gilson model 121, Middleton, WI, USA), and a recorder (ECB model

RB 201, São Paulo, SP, Brazil).

Drugs, lectins and reagents

Collagenase type IA, bovine serum albumin, compound 48/80, ionophore A23187, ovalbumin, Con A, and the lectins from Glycine max (SBA), Maackia amurensis, Triticum vulgaris (WGA), and Ulex europaeus I (UEA-I) were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO, USA).

The lectin from Canavalia brasiliensis seeds was purified by affinity chromatography on a Sephadex G-50 column (22). The lectin from Parkia platycephala seeds was purified by a combination of affinity chromatography on Sephadex G-100 and mannose-agarose columns (23). Mannose-specific Cymbosema roseum and lactose-specific C. roseum lectins were isolated by affinity chromatography on agarose-mannose and agarose-lactose columns, respectively (Cavada BS, unpublished results). Vatairea macrocarpa lectin was isolated by affinity chromatography on a Guar gum column (24). Demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis lectin were prepared by dialysis against 0.1 M EDTA followed by distilled water (25). The general characteristics (26-28) of the lectins used are presented in Table 1.

Statistical analysis

Data are reported as means ± SEM percentage of histamine released (supernatant) from the total histamine (supernatant plus pellets) present in the cells, with subtraction of spontaneous release. Data were analyzed statistically by the Student t-test for paired samples, with the level of significance set at P < 0.05.

Results

Histamine release induced by lectins

Con A, C. brasiliensis, mannose-specific C. roseum, M. amurensis, P. platycephala, WGA, and the demetallized lectins Con A and C. brasiliensis released histamine from Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells in a concentration-dependent manner. Except for Con A, these lectins also released histamine from hamster cheek pouch mast cells. Con A, C. brasiliensis, M. amurensis, and the demetallized lectins Con A and C. brasiliensis also stimulated Rowett nude rat peritoneal mast cells. Although effective in Wistar rat and hamster mast cells, mannose-specific C. roseum and P. platycephala did not stimulate Rowett nude mast cells; however, these cells behaved like Wistar rat and hamster mast cells when stimulated with the other lectins. Wide variation in potency and efficacy was observed among the lectins studied. Regarding the lectins with activity on these three types of cell suspensions (Con A, C. brasiliensis, M. amurensis, and demetallized C. brasiliensis), peritoneal cells from Wistar and Rowett nude rats were found to be more responsive than hamster cheek pouch cells. All lectins studied were inactive in guinea pig intestine mast cells (Figure 1).

Lactose-specific C. roseum, SBA, UEA-I and V. macrocarpa induced less histamine release (less than 5%) or were inactive (data not shown).

Stimulation with demetallized lectins: temperature effect

The histamine release induced by demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis in Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells was significantly inhibited by previous incubation at 4ºC. Histamine release induced by an antigen (ovalbumin, 10 µg/ml) and ionophore A23187 (1 µM) was also inhibited at this temperature (Table 2).

Effect of glucose saturation

No difference was observed in the histamine release induced by glucose-saturated and -non-saturated Con A in Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells. However, glucose saturation caused a significant inhibition of the histamine release induced by C. brasiliensis (Figure 2).

Influence of extracellular calcium concentration

In the absence of extracellular calcium, histamine release induced by Con A, C. brasiliensis, mannose-specific C. roseum, M. amurensis, P. platycephala, WGA, and demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis decreased significantly (Table 3).

Figure 1.
Lectin-induced histamine release from mast cell suspensions from Wistar rat peritoneal cavity (filled circles), hamster cheek pouch (squares), guinea pig intestine (triangles), and Rowett nude rat peritoneal cavity (open circles). The points indicate the means and the bars the respective SEM for 3-9 experiments. Some SEM were omitted to improve visualization of the figure.

Figure 2.
Histamine release induced by glucose-saturated lectins from Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells. Data are reported as means and SEM for 6 experiments. Con A = concanavalin A; C. brasiliensis = Canavalia brasiliensis. *P < 0.05 compared to non-saturated lectin (Student t-test for paired samples).

Table 1.
General characteristics of the plant lectins studied.

Table 2.
Effect of temperature on the histamine release induced by demetallized Con A and Canavalia brasiliensis in Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells compared to antigen (ovalbumin) and ionophore A23187.

Table 3.
Influence of extracellular calcium concentration on the histamine release induced by lectins from Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells.

Discussion

Among the lectins studied (Table 1), the glucose/mannose- or sialic acid-specific ones were active, showing that the induction of histamine release could be correlated to the specificity of the lectin binding sites. The activity of the lectins on mast cells showed different potency and efficacy depending on the animal specie and tissue. These findings indicate that these lectins are also influenced by the functional heterogeneity of mast cells, as are other secretagogues such as compound 48/80, peptide 401, dextran, ionophore A23187, as well as histamine release inhibitors like cromoglycate, quercetin, isoprenaline, and theophylline (29).

We have shown that lectins with high homology acting on the same tissue also presented variations which were considered to be probably due to the differences in the high affinity sites by which they bind to the mast cells (30). Dam et al. (31) confirmed this hypothesis, showing a significant correlation between the histamine-releasing properties of Diocleinae lectins (glucose/mannose) and their relative affinity constants for biantennary complex carbohydrate. Additionally, all of them consist of a mixture of isolectins that at different proportions could cause different effects (32).

We observed that, besides glucose/mannose-specific lectins, the lectin from M. amurensis and WGA also induced histamine release. M. amurensis is more specific for sialic acid and releases more histamine than WGA, which, although also binding to sialic acid, is more specific for N-acetylglucosamine. This suggests that the activity of M. amurensis and WGA is related to their binding properties to sialic acid. It is possible that these lectins might activate mast cells by a mechanism similar to that of compound 48/80, which has been reported to bind to sialic acid residues on the mast cell membranes (33). A guinea pig lung cell suspension that was insensitive to compound 48/80 was also insensitive to M. amurensis (data not shown), supporting the hypothesis of a similar mechanism.

Rowett nude rats are congenitally athymic, which means that they have greatly reduced or no immunoglobulins such as IgE (34). This characteristic would certainly prevent the histamine release induced by lectins through recognition of specific sugars located in the antibody molecules bound to mast cell membranes, which is the mechanism proposed for their histamine-releasing action (5,35). However, Con A, C. brasiliensis, M. amurensis, and demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis did release a high percentage of histamine from Rowett nude rat peritoneal mast cells, providing strong evidence for the existence of binding sites for lectins other than sugar located on the mast cell surface antibodies. Mannose-specific C. roseum and P. platycephala, also mannose and glucose specific, although quite active in Wistar rat peritoneal and hamster cheek pouch mast cells, did not stimulate Rowett nude rat peritoneal mast cells. This fact could mean that these lectins do not have the same binding sites that would allow them to stimulate the Rowett nude mast cells as the other glucose/mannose lectins. This hypothesis does not exclude the fact that the sugar-binding properties of plant lectins are in some way related to their histamine-releasing actions.

Con A-like lectins are able to bind to carbohydrates only when the metal-binding sites are occupied first by manganese (or another divalent transition metal ion) and then by calcium. The acid treatment of these lectins reversibly removes the metal ions and destroys their ability to bind carbohydrate (2,3,9). Surprisingly, demetallized Con A and C. brasiliensis can still induce histamine release by a non-cytotoxic mechanism, since the release was inhibited at 4ºC, strongly suggesting that the histamine release capacity of these lectins does not depend on the occupation of metal-binding sites and consequently that they do not need to bind to carbohydrates. It is important to note that the Tyrode used did not contain manganese or, alternatively, magnesium. Although manganese was not detected in the biological material, magnesium was found (0.012 mM) in the concentration much lower than that necessary to occupy the binding sites of the metallized lectins (25,36). Glucose saturation did not prevent the histamine-releasing activity of Con A and C. brasiliensis in Wistar rat peritoneal mast cells. However, it is important to point out that this property seems to influence the induction of histamine release since saturated C. brasiliensis did release less histamine than the non-saturated form. These results provide additional evidence emphasizing that these lectins can induce histamine release independent of their sugar-binding sites, and that these sites might be at least related to mast cell stimulation by lectins.

The histamine-releasing properties of lectins have been reported to depend on the extracellular calcium concentration (7,10-12), a characteristic shared by the lectins used in our experiments. The histamine release induced by all lectins was also inhibited in the absence of external calcium.

Although we confirmed that some plant lectins depend on their sugar-binding properties, our results show functional evidence that the activation of mast cells by important glucose/mannose lectins such as Con A and from C. brasiliensis might also occur through mechanisms independent of the occupation of sugar- and metal-binding sites. Probably as a consequence, IgE bound to the mast cell membrane are not important for this type of histamine-releasing action.

Address for correspondence: J.C. Gomes, Departamento de Farmacologia, Instituto de Biociências, UNESP, Rubião Junior, 18618-000, Botucatu, SP, Brasil. Fax: +55-14-3815-3744. E-mail: jcgomes@ibb.unesp.br

Research supported by FAPESP (No. 00/08418-4). F.C. Lopes was the recipient of a fellowship from CAPES. Received August 4, 2003. Accepted February 3, 2005.

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  • Correspondence and Footnotes

  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      28 Sept 2005
    • Date of issue
      June 2005

    History

    • Accepted
      03 Feb 2005
    • Received
      04 Aug 2003
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