Abstract
“Specific granule” deficiency (SGD) has been previously associated with lactoferrin deficiency. The antimicrobial peptides termed defensins, comprising 30% of normal primary granule proteins, have also been shown to be markedly deficient in SGD. The present study was undertaken to correlate these findings with ultrastructural morphometric analysis and peroxidase cytochemistry. Peroxidase-positive, rim-stained, large, defensin-rich dense granules, previously described as a subpopulation of azurophil or primary granules in normal neutrophils, were markedly decreased in a patient with SGD. Morphometric studies of peroxidase- positive granules indicated an average peroxidase-positive granule area (all profiles) in the patient of 0.019 +/- 0.017 micron 2 (mean +/- SD, n = 941) compared to control values from normal neutrophils of two volunteers of 0.049 +/- 0.033 micron 2 (n = 896) and 0.050 +/- 0.039 micron 2 (n = 873) (P less than 0.001 between patient and control samples). Granule histograms showed a single peak of small peroxidase- positive granules, whereas control samples contained more prominent subpopulations of larger peroxidase-positive granules. The total number of peroxidase-positive granules per 100 micron 2 of cytoplasm in the patient was 255 +/- 124 (mean +/- SD, n = 15 cell profiles), which was similar to control values of 266 +/- 63 and 212 +/- 109. Thus, the defensin deficiency in SGD is associated with a decrease in size rather than number of peroxidase-positive granules; suggesting that defensins contribute to normal peroxidase-positive granule size and that SGD is a more global granule deficiency than originally thought.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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