Pulmonary Surfactant Protein A Augments the Phagocytosis of Streptococcus pneumoniae by Alveolar Macrophages through a Casein Kinase 2-dependent Increase of Cell Surface Localization of Scavenger Receptor A*
- Koji Kuronuma‡§,
- Hitomi Sano‡¶,
- Kazunori Kato∥,
- Kazumi Kudo‡§,
- Naoki Hyakushima‡,
- Shin-ichi Yokota**,
- Hiroki Takahashi§,
- Nobuhiro Fujii**,
- Hiroshi Suzuki‡‡,
- Tatsuhiko Kodama§§,
- Shosaku Abe§ and
- Yoshio Kuroki‡¶¶¶
- ‡Department of Biochemistry, **Department of Microbiology, ∥Department of Molecular Medicine, and §Third Department of Internal Medicine, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8556, Japan, ‡‡National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Obihiro 080-8555, Japan, §§Laboratory for Systems Biology and Medicine, Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 153-8904, Japan, and ¶CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi 332-0012, Japan
- ↵¶¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Biochemistry, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo 060-8556, Japan. Tel.: 81-11-611-2111 (ext. 2670); Fax: 81-11-611-2236; E-mail: kurokiy{at}sapmed.ac.jp.
Abstract
Pulmonary surfactant proteins A (SP-A) and D (SP-D), members of the collectin family, play important roles in the innate immune system of the lung. Here, we show that SP-A but not SP-D augmented phagocytosis of Streptococcus pneumoniae by alveolar macrophages, independent of its binding to the bacteria. Analysis of the SP-A/SP-D chimeras, in which progressively longer carboxyl-terminal regions of SP-A were replaced with the corresponding SP-D regions, has revealed that the SP-D region Gly346-Phe355 can be substituted for the SP-A region Leu219-Phe228 without altering the SP-A activity of enhancing the phagocytosis and that the SP-A region Cys204-Cys218 is required for the SP-A-mediated phagocytosis. Acetylated low density lipoprotein significantly reduced the SP-A-stimulated uptake of the bacteria. SP-A failed to enhance the phagocytosis of S. pneumoniae by alveolar macrophages derived from scavenger receptor A (SR-A)-deficient mice, demonstrating that SP-A augments SRA-mediated phagocytosis. Preincubation of macrophages with SP-A at 37 °C but not at 4 °C stimulated the phagocytosis. The SP-A-mediated enhanced phagocytosis was not inhibited by the presence of cycloheximide. SP-A increased cell surface localization of SR-A that was inhibitable by apigenin, a casein kinase 2 (CK2) inhibitor. SP-A-treated macrophages exhibited significantly greater binding of acetylated low density lipoprotein than nontreated cells. The SP-A-stimulated phagocytosis was also abolished by apigenin. In addition, SP-A stimulated CK2 activity. These results demonstrate that SP-A enhances the phagocytosis of S. pneumoniae by alveolar macrophages through a CK2-dependent increase of cell surface SR-A localization. This study reveals a novel mechanism of bacterial clearance by alveolar macrophages.
- Received November 14, 2003.
- Revision received February 11, 2004.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











