Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry, Vol. 51, 159-166, February 2003, Copyright © 2003, The Histochemical Society, Inc.


ARTICLE

Enhanced Expression of Duffy Antigen in the Lungs During Suppurative Pneumonia

Janet S. Leea, Charles W. Freverta, David R. Thorningb, Stephan Segererb, Charles E. Alpersb, Jean-Pierre Cartronc, Yves Colinc, Venus A. Wonga, Thomas R. Martina, and Richard B. Goodmana
a Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine
b Department of Pathology
c VA Puget Sound Health Care System and the University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, and INSERM U76, Institut National de La Transfusion Sanguine, Paris, France

Correspondence to: Richard B. Goodman, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Pulmonary, 111B, 1660 South Columbian Way, Seattle, WA 98108. E-mail: goodmanr@u.washington.edu


  Summary
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Duffy antigen is a chemokine binding protein expressed on the surface of erythrocytes and postcapillary venular endothelial cells. It binds selective CXC and CC chemokines with high affinity. Although Duffy antigen is present in the normal pulmonary vascular bed, it is not known whether its expression is altered by innate inflammatory responses in the lungs. We studied Duffy antigen expression by immunohistochemistry in autopsy lung specimens from 16 cases of suppurative pneumonia, 11 cases of acute lung injury, and seven normal lungs. In lungs with suppurative pneumonia, Duffy antigen was expressed in higher numbers of pre- and postcapillary parenchymal vessels compared to normal specimens or specimens with acute lung injury (p<0.03 and p<0.02, respectively). Lungs with suppurative pneumonia also showed Duffy antigen expression on the alveolar septa, whereas this was a rare finding in normal specimens or in acute lung injury (p<0.02). Furthermore, Duffy antigen labeling of the alveolar septa localized to regions with airspace accumulation of neutrophil-rich exudates. In summary, Duffy antigen expression is increased in the vascular beds and alveolar septa of the lung parenchyma during suppurative pneumonia, suggesting that Duffy antigen may have a functional role in the lung parenchyma during inflammation. (J Histochem Cytochem 51:159–166, 2003)

Key Words: Duffy antigen, endothelial, chemokines, lungs, pneumonia


  Introduction
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

THE DUFFY ANTIGEN is a minor blood group antigen and a chemokine binding protein expressed on the surface of erythrocytes and postcapillary venular endothelial cells (Darbonne et al. 1991 ; Hadley et al. 1994 ; Murphy et al. 2000 ). It selectively binds members of the CXC and CC chemokine families with high affinity (Darbonne et al. 1991 ; Horuk et al. 1993 ; Neote et al. 1993 , Neote et al. 1994 ). In particular, the Duffy antigen binds a subset of the CXC chemokines that contain the tripeptide motif glutamyl-leucyl-arginine (ELR+ CXC), which are neutrophil chemoattractants and are proangiogenic (Murphy et al. 2000 ). Interleukin-8 (IL-8) and growth related oncogene-{alpha} (GRO-{alpha}) are two important members of the ELR+ CXC chemokine family, whose interactions with the Duffy antigen have been previously well characterized (Darbonne et al. 1991 ; Horuk et al. 1993 ; Neote et al. 1993 , Neote et al. 1994 ; Chaudhuri et al. 1994 ; Hadley et al. 1994 ; Hesselgesser et al. 1995 ; Strieter et al. 1995 ; Szabo et al. 1995 ).

Duffy mRNA and protein are upregulated during inflammatory conditions in the kidney, suggesting that the selective chemokine binding properties of Duffy antigen may be biologically relevant during inflammation (Liu et al. 1999 ; Segerer et al. 2000 ). A study in transgenic mice showed that targeted overexpression of the Duffy antigen in endothelial cells attenuated the angiogenic effect of the mouse CXC chemokine macrophage inflammatory peptide-2 (MIP-2) (Du et al. 2002 ). Dawson and colleagues 2000 showed that mice with a targeted deletion of the Duffy antigen receiving IP injections of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) have significantly increased inflammatory changes in the lungs and liver. By contrast, Luo et al. 2000 showed that Duffy-null mice have impaired neutrophil recruitment into organs such as the lungs at a later time point after a lower dose of IP LPS. Although the three findings differ, they are all consistent with the hypothesis that the Duffy antigen participates in regulating effective chemokine concentrations in tissue (Dawson et al. 2000 ). Although human lungs express Duffy mRNA (Neote et al. 1994 ) and the Duffy antigen is detectable on normal venular endothelium and type I epithelial cells of the lungs by immunoelectron microscopy (Chaudhuri et al. 1997 ), the relationship between Duffy antigen expression and neutrophil accumulation in the lung parenchyma during inflammation in humans has not been clearly defined.

Our goal was to determine how the tissue distribution of Duffy antigen in human lungs is modified during suppurative pneumonia, a process associated with recruitment of neutrophils into airspace units. We used a monoclonal antibody (MAb) that specifically recognizes the Duffy antigen (Segerer et al. 2000 , Segerer et al. 2001 ; Wasniowska et al. 2002 ). During suppurative inflammation there was an increase in the number of Duffy positive pre- and postcapillary microvessels compared with normal lungs or specimens with acute lung injury. In the majority of lungs with suppurative pneumonia, Duffy antigen expression was also detectable on the alveolar septa. This is in contrast to normal lungs and specimens with acute lung injury, in which alveolar septal immunostaining was a rare finding. Moreover, the alveolar septal immunostaining observed during suppurative pneumonia co-localized to regions of neutrophilic airspace accumulation. The enhanced expression of Duffy antigen in the pulmonary parenchymal microvessels and the alveolar septa suggests that the Duffy antigen may have a biological role in the lungs during suppurative inflammation.


  Materials and Methods
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Lung Tissue Specimens
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Human Subjects Division at the University of Washington. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lung tissues were identified from autopsies performed during the years 2000–2001 at the VA Puget Sound Medical Center (Seattle, WA). Lung tissue was collected at autopsy and routinely fixed by intratracheal instillation of formalin at 20 cm H2O pressure. After inflation, the lungs were immersed in formalin, then embedded in paraffin and sectioned by standard methods. Hematoxylin- and eosin-stained slides from each lung specimen were initially reviewed by a pathologist and organized into three groups on the basis of light microscopic findings: (a) lungs with suppurative airspace pneumonitis; (b) acute lung injury; and (c) normal lungs. Specimens with the histological diagnosis of suppurative airspace pneumonitis showed extensive neutrophil infiltration of the airspaces. Specimens with acute lung injury were defined as tissue sections with evidence of parenchymal injury such as protein-rich exudates in the airspaces, intra-alveolar fibrin deposition, alveolar microhemorrhage, or hyaline membrane formation, in the absence of a prominent neutrophilic airspace process. When the patterns overlapped, as in cases where there was evidence of airspace accumulation of neutrophils in a few locations on the slide and therefore only a minor component of the pathology, the specimens were classified according to the predominant histological finding. Normal lungs showed no evidence of an inflammatory cell infiltrate or parenchymal injury. A total of 16 cases of suppurative pneumonia, 11 cases of acute lung injury, and seven cases of normal lungs were studied.

Immunohistochemistry
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded lung tissue samples were cut into 4-µm sections, deparaffinized in xylene, and rehydrated in a series of graded ethanol. Microwave treatment in citrate-based buffer was used for antigen retrieval (Vector Labs; Burlingame, CA). Endogeous peroxidases and biotin were blocked using 3% H2O2 in methanol and an avidin-biotin blocking kit (Vector Labs). The specificity of MAb {alpha}Fy6 (clone 2C3) used in this study was determined by immunoblotting, and epitope mapping showed that it binds to the epitope 24FEDVW28 located on the amino-terminal extracellular domain of the Duffy glycoprotein (Segerer et al. 2000 ; Wasniowska et al. 2002 ). An irrelevant monoclonal IgG1 isotype antibody (Dako Diagnostics; Glostrup, Denmark) was used as the control primary antibody. A biotinylated horse anti-murine IgG served as the secondary antibody (Vector Labs). A commercially available peroxidase-conjugated streptavidin complex was used for signal amplification (ABC Elite kit; Vector Labs). The color substrate was formed using diaminobenzidine and nickel chloride. Slides were counterstained with methyl green.

Morphometric Analysis
The number of immunoreactive pre- and postcapillary vessels in the lung parenchyma in each tissue section was scored semiquantitatively by counting the total number of immunostained vessels in five high-powered fields (x200). The number of immunostained vessels was normalized to the number of alveoli in each high-powered field to yield the number of immunostained pre- and postcapillary parenchymal vessels in each alveolar unit. High-powered fields were selected sequentially from a predetermined list of 31 random x,y coordinates. High-powered fields that did not contain more than 75% lung parenchyma were excluded from the scoring. Mean scores were derived from the data of two observers. Each specimen was also scored for the presence or absence of Duffy immunostaining on alveolar septal capillaries (absent = 0, present = 1). Review of slides was performed by three independent observers, including the clinical pathologist who performed the autopsy. In cases where there was disagreement about the presence of alveolar septal immunostaining, specimens were scored as "1" if two observers agreed on its presence. Nonparametric analysis was performed using the Mann–Whitney U-test. No patient identifiers were linked to the tissue samples, consistent with the guidelines of the Institutional Review Board. Therefore, demographic or clinical information could not be obtained, and only autopsy-related diagnoses were available.


  Results
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

The analysis showed two regions in which Duffy immunostaining was readily detectable: the bronchiolar region and the lung parenchyma. The immunostaining in the lung parenchyma was subdivided into (a) the pre- and postcapillary microvessels and (b) the alveolar septa. The terminology of arteriole vs venule was not applied in describing the vessels of the lung parenchyma because vessels less than approximately 50 µm in diameter lack well-defined smooth muscle layers, preventing a clear distinction between arterioles and venules. Precapillary vessels were defined as all vessels located within parenchymal units with diameters greater than those of capillaries. These were often found at the junction of two or more converging alveolar septa (Fig 1A and Fig 1B, arrowheads). Postcapillary vessels were identified by location outside parenchymal units within interlobular septa (Fig 1C, black arrowheads).



View larger version (167K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1. Duffy antigen expression on lung parenchymal pre- and postcapillary vessels. Immunohistochemistry was carried out using MAb {alpha}Fy6. Duffy antigen staining is reflected by the black color product. Arrows indicate the alveolar septa, and black arrowheads indicate pre- or postcapillary vessels. (A) Duffy antigen labeling along the alveolar septa and precapillary vessels of various sizes from a specimen with suppurative pneumonia. (B) Higher magnification of A showing two precapillary vessels with Duffy antigen labeling. (C) Postcapillary vessels (black arrowheads) are identified near the interlobular septa (clear arrowheads) from a specimen with suppurative pneumonia. (D) Normal lung shows Duffy antigen labeling in precapillary vessels but absent staining on alveolar septa. (E) Specimen with acute lung injury shows absence of Duffy antigen expression along the alveolar septa. (F) Another specimen with acute lung injury shows precapillary vessel staining for Duffy antigen.

Alveolar Septal Immunostaining
Whereas Duffy antigen was detectable in the majority of specimens with suppurative pneumonia (Fig 2B), it was rarely detectable on the alveolar septa of normal lungs or specimens with acute lung injury (Fig 1D– 1F, arrows). Semiquantitative analysis showed a significant relationship between the presence of Duffy antigen labeling on the alveolar septa and suppurative pneumonia (Fig 3). The immunostaining on the alveolar septa formed many circumscribed channels that often contained erythrocytes or leukocytes in their lumens, suggesting that the immunostaining outlined capillaries rather than type I epithelial cells of the alveolar septa (Fig 2E, arrows). Within the same lung specimen, the distribution of alveolar septal immunostaining tended to occur in alveoli with neutrophil accumulation (Fig 2D), whereas, in alveoli with relative neutrophil sparing, alveolar septal immunostaining was not present (Fig 2C).



View larger version (175K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 2. Duffy antigen is expressed on alveolar septa during suppurative pneumonia and co-localizes to areas of prominent neutrophilic airspace accumulation. (A) Serial section from one lung specimen labeled with isotype control antibody. (B) Serial section from the same lung specimen labeled with MAb {alpha}Fy6 specific for Duffy antigen. Duffy antigen staining is reflected by the black color product. Arrows indicate the alveolar septa and arrowheads indicate precapillary vessels. Note that erythrocytes in the lumen of a precapillary vessel show Duffy antigen staining. (C) Duffy antigen labeling is absent along alveolar septa in an area of the lung section without neutrophilic airspace accumulation. (D) Higher magnification of B shows prominent alveolar septal immunostaining in an area of the lung section with neutrophilic airspace accumulation. (E) Higher magnification of B and D showing Duffy antigen labeling along the alveolar septa. Duffy antigen labeling outlines the formation of what appear to be capillaries. Both erythrocytes and leukocytes are seen within the lumen of vessels. (F) H & E staining shows that the inflammatory cell accumulation within the airspace is predominantly neutrophilic.



View larger version (20K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 3. Alveolar septal immunostaining occurs more frequently in lungs with suppurative pneumonia. Specimen groups include group 1 (normal lungs), group 2 (acute lung injury), and group 3 (suppurative pneumonia). The data are the percentage of specimens in each group with immunostaining along the alveolar septae. *p<0.02 using the Mann–Whitney U-test comparing suppurative with normal and suppurative with acute lung injury.

Specimens with acute lung injury, characterized by protein-rich exudates in the airspaces that reflect the loss of integrity to the alveolar capillary epithelial membrane, showed almost complete absence of Duffy antigen labeling in all vessels throughout the parenchyma (Fig 1E). Although other specimens in the lung injury group showed Duffy antigen expression on pre- and postcapillary vessels, alveolar septal staining was absent in the majority of cases (Fig 1F). In normal lungs, Duffy antigen labeling of the alveolar septa was not detectable in 6/7 specimens. The normal lung specimen showing Duffy antigen-positive alveolar septal staining was obtained from a patient with a postmortem diagnosis of clostridial infection with gas-filled cystic lesions of the liver. Unlike the patchy alveolar staining detected in lungs with suppurative pneumonia, the alveolar septal immunostaining was uniformly distributed throughout the lung tissue (not shown).

Pre- and Postcapillary Microvessel Immunostaining
Semiquantitative data showed that the number of Duffy-positive pre- and postcapillary microvessels was significantly higher in lungs with extensive airspace accumulation of neutrophils (Fig 4). In general, specimens in the normal or acute lung injury group showed only low-level reactivity for Duffy antigen that had a patchy distribution in pre- and postcapillary vessels (Fig 1D and Fig 1F).



View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 4. The number of positively staining pre- and postcapillary microvessels is higher in lungs with suppurative pneumonia. Specimen groups include group 1 (normal lungs), group 2 (acute lung injury), and group 3 (suppurative pneumonia). {diamondsuit}p<0.03 comparing suppurative with normal, and *p<0.02 comparing suppurative with acute lung injury using the Mann–Whitney U-test.

Bronchiolar Vessel Immunostaining
Normal lung tissue showed constitutive expression of Duffy antigen in the small and medium-sized bronchiolar vessels. The presence of parenchymal inflammation did not appear to influence the expression of Duffy antigen in the vessels surrounding the small airways (data not shown).


  Discussion
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

The purpose of this study was to define the expression of the Duffy antigen in vivo during lung inflammation. The main focus was to determine whether enhanced expression of the Duffy antigen occurs in the lung parenchyma during suppurative pneumonia, a process associated with neutrophil accumulation in the airspaces. In normal lungs there was low-level Duffy antigen expression in the pre- and postcapillary vessels of the lung parenchyma. In both normal lungs and lungs with acute lung injury, Duffy antigen expression on the alveolar septa was infrequent. In contrast, lung specimens with suppurative pneumonia showed increased Duffy antigen expression in precapillary and postcapillary vessels, as well as the alveolar septa.

This interpretation is based on the following semiquantitative analysis. First, the number of pre- and postcapillary vessels showing Duffy antigen labeling was higher in specimens with suppurative pneumonia compared with the acute lung injury or normal groups (p<0.02 comparing suppurative vs acute lung injury; p<0.03 comparing suppurative vs normal). Second, the number of lung specimens in the suppurative pneumonia group containing alveolar septal immunostaining was significantly higher than either the acute lung injury group or the normal group (p<0.02). In addition, in each specimen alveolar septal staining was localized to areas of neutrophil accumulation. Finally, the expression of Duffy antigen during suppurative pneumonia was specific to the parenchymal vessels, and no increase in labeling was identified on bronchiolar vessels. Taken together, these findings show an association between suppurative pneumonia and an increase in Duffy antigen expression in the parenchymal vascular beds and the alveolar septa.

Although an increase in Duffy expression has been detected during inflammatory states of the kidney (Liu et al. 1999 ; Segerer et al. 2000 , Segerer et al. 2001 ), no information is available about the effect of inflammation on Duffy antigen expression in the lungs. We chose to focus on suppurative pneumonia as an example of acute inflammation not only because of its clinical importance but because of the neutrophil-predominant infiltration of the airspaces. We hypothesized that the expression of Duffy antigen, which binds CXC chemokines, is enhanced at sites of neutrophil migration in the lungs. The data show detectable constitutive expression of Duffy antigen on pre- and postcapillary parenchymal vessels and bronchiolar vessels but not on the alveolar septa. The number of pre- and postcapillary vessels positive for Duffy antigen increases during suppurative pneumonia. There is also a significant relationship between the presence of Duffy antigen labeling on the alveolar septa and suppurative pneumonia.

Our finding is the first report of enhanced expression of the Duffy antigen in the pulmonary parechymal microvessels and the alveolar septa during lung inflammation. Others have shown that Duffy antigen is expressed on bronchiolar capillaries, venules, and type I epithelial cells in the normal lung using immunoelectron microscopy and a polyclonal antibody directed against the carbohydrate portion of the Duffy antigen (Chaudhuri et al. 1997 ). Our light microscopic analysis suggested that positively stained alveolar septal cells have the appearance of capillaries rather than type I alveolar epithelial cells, based on their tubular shape in some cuts and the presence of erythrocytes and leukocytes within their lumen. Because the limitation of the study is that an endothelium-specific marker was not used to confirm alveolar septal immunostaining as endothelial in origin, we cannot conclusively determine that the alveolar septal immunostaining observed represents alveolar capillaries as opposed to type I epithelial cells. Nevertheless, these studies demonstrate increased Duffy antigen expression in suppurative pneumonia and suggest that the Duffy protein can be regulated during inflammation.

There was variability in Duffy antigen expression within individual specimens in each group, and disease variability may account for some of the differences. Clinical information such as severity of disease, duration of illness, and co-morbid conditions was not available, and only diagnoses made from postmortem examination of tissue were available for this study. Interestingly, one specimen obtained from a patient with widespread clostridial infection diagnosed at autopsy showed intense Duffy antigen expression throughout the parenchymal vascular bed and the alveolar septa despite histologically "normal" lungs. This stands in contrast to all other "normal" lung specimens that showed low-level Duffy antigen staining on vessels and absence of staining on the alveolar septa. Although the lungs from the patient were histologically normal, it is tempting to speculate that a soluble mediator(s) in the circulation may have stimulated enhanced Duffy expression.

Polymorphisms in the Duffy antigen locus could also account for some of the variability observed. The red blood cells (RBCs) of individuals homozygous for the Fyx polymorphism (Arg89Cys) have only 10% of Duffy expression and 25% binding of [125I] -IL-8 compared with RBCs of individuals with the more prevalent Fya or Fyb polymorphisms (Tournamille et al. 1998 ; Yazdanbakhsh et al. 2000 ). Because the Fyx polymorphism results from a point mutation within the coding region of the Duffy gene, the nonerythroid cells should also show reduced expression and chemokine binding (Olsson et al. 1998 ; Parasol et al. 1998 ; Tournamille et al. 1998 ; Wasniowska et al. 2002 ).

In contrast, the GATA1 promoter mutation that renders erythrocytes Duffy-negative in the majority of African–Americans is a mutation occurring in the erythroid-specific promoter region and would not alter Duffy expression on nonerythroid cells (Olsson et al. 1998 ; Peiper et al. 1995 ; Tournamille et al. 1995 ). Of the 34 specimens examined, three were Duffy-negative on erythrocytes but positive on vessels, and one was Duffy-negative on erythrocytes with extremely low-level to no staining on vessels. It is possible that the three specimens with negative staining on erythrocytes but positive staining on venules were obtained from individuals with the GATA1 promoter mutation that effectively silences Duffy expression on erythrocytes but not on nonerythroid cells (Tournamille et al. 1995 ). It is also possible that the single specimen lacking erythrocyte staining and showing near-absent levels of staining on vessels was derived from an individual with the Fyx mutation. This lung section showed diffuse alveolar damage consistent with acute lung injury (Fig 1E), and the near-absent immunoreactivity of this lung section could be explained by the specimen originating from an individual with the Fyx mutation. Therefore, the Fyx but not the GATA1 mutation can account for some variability in the nonerythroid Duffy antigen expression among individual specimens of a particular group. However, this accounted for a relatively minor number of samples in our study (1/34 samples). This frequency agrees with the 2.5–3.5% frequency of the Fyx mutation found in the White population reported in the literature (Olsson et al. 1998 ; Yazdanbakhsh et al. 2000 ).

Two in vivo animal studies have shown that Duffy-knockout mice can exhibit differential responses to an inflammatory stimulus such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS), depending on the dose, timing of the stimulus, and the focus of the experimental design (Dawson et al. 2000 ; Luo et al. 2000 ). This attests to the complex role that Duffy antigen may play during inflammation. Dawson and colleagues 2000 observed an exaggerated neutrophil influx into the liver and lungs 2 hr after an IP injection of LPS (30 mg/kg) in Duffy-null mice. Their work suggests that the absence of the chemokine sink effect by circulating Duffy-null RBCs may promote distant organ inflammation when such systemic inflammatory doses of LPS are administered. However, Luo and colleagues 2000 observed impaired neutrophil recruitment into the peritoneum, intestine, and lungs 24 hr after an IP injection of LPS (10 mg/kg) in Duffy-null mice. They found similar results when thioglycolate was used as the inflammatory stimulus. The findings of Luo and colleagues suggest that Duffy antigen may participate in the neutrophil migratory process. This is in keeping with the concept that, on endothelial cells, Duffy antigen may serve as a mediator of chemokine transcytosis, thus facilitating neutrophil recruitment (Middleton et al. 1997 ). The biological role of enhanced Duffy antigen expression in the lung microvasculature during suppurative pneumonia remains undefined and could play an anti-inflammatory role in the lungs by binding excess chemokines and might reduce chemokine availability to neutrophils. Alternatively, enhanced Duffy antigen expression could serve a proinflammatory role in the lungs by participating in chemokine transport across the endothelium, as others have suggested (Peiper et al. 1995 ; Chaudhuri et al. 1997 ; Middleton et al. 1997 ), and thereby facilitate neutrophil recruitment into organ-specific sites.

In the lungs, Duffy antigen is constitutively expressed at low levels on pre- and postcapillary vessels of the parenchyma. During suppurative pneumonia there is increased Duffy antigen expression in the parenchymal microvessels and the alveolar septa. These observations suggest that expression of Duffy antigen is regulated in the lung microvasculature by the inflammatory process and that enhanced expression of Duffy antigen may play an important role in chemokine mediation of neutrophil recruitment in the lungs during suppurative pneumonia.


  Acknowledgments

Supported by the VA Medical Research Service (HL10470, HL70178, HL69955, HL030542, HL63652, and DK47659).

We gratefully acknowledge Jeanna Strout and Eden Palmer for their assistance with the image preparation.

Received for publication June 28, 2002; accepted October 17, 2002.


  Literature Cited
Top
Summary
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Literature Cited

Chaudhuri A, Nielsen S, Elkjaer ML, Zbrzezna V, Fang F, Pogo AO (1997) Detection of Duffy antigen in the plasma membranes and caveolae of vascular endothelial and epithelial cells of nonerythroid organs. Blood 89:701-712[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Chaudhuri A, Zbrzezna V, Polyakova J, Pogo AO, Hesselgesser J, Horuk R (1994) Expression of the Duffy antigen in K562 cells. Evidence that it is the human erythrocyte chemokine receptor. J Biol Chem 269:7835-7838[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Darbonne WC, Rice GC, Mohler MA, Apple T, Hebert CA, Valente AJ, Baker JB (1991) Red blood cells are a sink for interleukin 8, a leukocyte chemotaxin. J Clin Invest 88:1362-1369[Medline]

Dawson TC, Lentsch AB, Wang Z, Cowhig JE, Rot A, Maeda N, Peiper SC (2000) Exaggerated response to endotoxin in mice lacking the Duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines (DARC). Blood 96:1681-1684[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Du J, Luan J, Liu H, Daniel TO, Peiper S, Chen TS, Yu Y, Horton LW et al. (2002) Potential role for Duffy antigen chemokine-binding protein in angiogenesis and maintenance of homeostasis in response to stress. J Leukocyte Biol 71:141-153[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Hadley TJ, Lu ZH, Wasniowska K, Martin AW, Peiper SC, Hesselgesser J, Horuk R (1994) Postcapillary venule endothelial cells in kidney express a multispecific chemokine receptor that is structurally and functionally identical to the erythroid isoform, which is the Duffy blood group antigen. J Clin Invest 94:985-991[Medline]

Hesselgesser J, Chitnis CE, Miller LH, Yansura DG, Simmons LC, Fairbrother WJ, Kotts C et al. (1995) A mutant of melanoma growth stimulating activity does not activate neutrophils but blocks erythrocyte invasion by malaria. J Biol Chem 270:11472-11476[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Horuk R, Chitnis CE, Darbonne WC, Colby TJ, Rybicki A, Hadley TJ, Miller LH (1993) A receptor for the malarial parasite Plasmodium vivax: the erythrocyte chemokine receptor. Science 261:1182-1184[Medline]

Liu XH, Hadley TJ, Xu L, Peiper SC, Ray PE (1999) Up-regulation of Duffy antigen receptor expression in children with renal disease. Kidney Int 55:1491-1500[Medline]

Luo H, Chaudhuri A, Zbrzezna V, He Y, Pogo AO (2000) Deletion of the murine Duffy gene (Dfy) reveals that the Duffy receptor is functionally redundant. Mol Cell Biol 20:3097-3101[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Middleton J, Neil S, Wintle J, Clark–Lewis I, Moore H, Lam C, Auer M et al. (1997) Transcytosis and surface presentation of IL-8 by venular endothelial cells. Cell 91:385-395[Medline]

Murphy PM, Baggiolini M, Charo IF, Hebert CA, Horuk R, Matsushima K, Miller LH et al. (2000) International Union of Pharmacology. XXII. Nomenclature for chemokine receptors. Pharmacol Rev 52:145-176[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Neote K, Darbonne W, Ogez J, Horuk R, Schall TJ (1993) Identification of a promiscuous inflammatory peptide receptor on the surface of red blood cells. J Biol Chem 268:12247-12249[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Neote K, Mak JY, Kolakowski LF, Schall TJ (1994) Functional and biochemical analysis of the cloned Duffy antigen: identity with the red blood cell chemokine receptor. Blood 84:44-52[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Olsson ML, Smythe JS, Hansson C, Poole J, Mallinson G, Jones J, Avent ND et al. (1998) The Fy(x) phenotype is associated with a missense mutation in the Fy(b) allele predicting Arg89Cys in the Duffy glycoprotein. Br J Haematol 103:1184-1191[Medline]

Parasol N, Reid M, Rios M, Castilho L, Harari I, Kosower NS (1998) A novel mutation in the coding sequence of the FY allele of the Duffy chemokine receptor gene is associated with an altered erythrocyte phenotype. Blood 92:2237-2243[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Peiper SC, Wang ZX, Neote K, Martin AW, Showell HJ, Conklyn MJ, Ogborne K et al. (1995) The Duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines (DARC) is expressed in endothelial cells of Duffy negative individuals who lack the erythrocyte receptor. J Exp Med 181:1311-1317[Abstract]

Segerer S, Cui Y, Eitner F, Goodpaster T, Hudkins KL, Mack M, Cartron JP et al. (2001) Expression of chemokines and chemokine receptors during human renal transplant rejection. Am J Kidney Dis 37:518-531[Medline]

Segerer S, Regele H, Mac KM, Kain R, Cartron JP, Colin Y, Kerjaschki D et al. (2000) The Duffy antigen receptor for chemokines is up-regulated during acute renal transplant rejection and crescentic glomerulonephritis. Kidney Int 58:1546-1556[Medline]

Strieter RM, Polverini PJ, Kunkel SL, Arenberg DA, Burdick MD, Kasper J, Dzuiba J et al. (1995) The functional role of the ELR motif in CXC chemokine-mediated angiogenesis. J Biol Chem 270:27348-27357[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Szabo MC, Soo KS, Zlotnik A, Schall TJ (1995) Chemokine class differences in binding to the Duffy antigen-erythrocyte chemokine receptor. J Biol Chem 270:25348-25351[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Tournamille C, Colin Y, Cartron JP, Le Van Kim C (1995) Disruption of a GATA motif in the Duffy gene promoter abolishes erythroid gene expression in Duffy-negative individuals. Nature Genet 10:224-228[Medline]

Tournamille C, Le Van Kim C, Gane P, Le Pennec PY, Roubinet F, Babinet J, Cartron JP et al. (1998) Arg89Cys substitution results in very low membrane expression of the Duffy antigen/receptor for chemokines in Fy(x) individuals. Blood 92:2147-2156[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Wasniowska K, Petit–LeRoux Y, Tournamille C, Le Van Kim C, Cartron JP, Colin Y, Lisowska E et al. (2002) Structural characterization of the epitope recognized by the new anti-Fy6 monoclonal antibody NaM 185–2C3. Transfus Med 12:205-211[Medline]

Yazdanbakhsh K, Rios M, Storry JR, Kosower N, Parasol N, Chaudhuri A, Reid ME (2000) Molecular mechanisms that lead to reduced expression of duffy antigens. Transfusion 40:310-320[Medline]