Chemotaxis of the peritoneal cells and the detection of a chemo-attractant in the effluent from peritoneal dialysis patients

1990 
The migration of peritoneal cells from 25 continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients and eight healthy women undergoing laparoscopy were studied. Peritoneal cells of continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients migrated to commonly used chemoattractants, like N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenyl-alanine-methyl- ester and casein, but they also migrated to high concentrations of recombinant interleukin-1 alpha and to endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide). In the peritoneal effluent from continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients a rather heat stable chemoattractant was found with a molecular weight of 40-200 kDa with an optimal activity at approximately 125 kDa. The chemoattractant is a protein and is not complement factor 5a or interleukin-1 and was only found in peritoneal effluent from continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients, but not in peritoneal fluid from healthy women undergoing laparoscopy. Therefore, peritoneal dialysis might induce the generation of a chemoattractant. The optimal chemotactic response of peritoneal cells from continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis patients to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenyl-alanine-methyl- ester in medium could be enhanced by replacing the medium by peritoneal effluent. So the chemotaxis of peritoneal cells to the factor in the peritoneal effluent is caused by another mechanism, which might involve different cell surface receptor populations, than the chemotactic response to N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenyl-alanine-methyl-ester
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