Dual role of the CD44 molecule in T cell adhesion and activation |
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Authors: | Y Shimizu G A Van Seventer R Siraganian L Wahl S Shaw |
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Affiliation: | Experimental Immunology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892. |
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Abstract: | Studies of T cell adhesion and activation reveal two new functions of the CD44 molecule, a molecule now recognized to be identical to three molecules of functional interest: Pgp-1, Hermes, and extracellular matrix receptor type III (ECMRIII). By screening for mAb which inhibit T cell adhesion to E, we have identified a functionally unique CD44-specific mAb, NIH44-1, which partially inhibits T cell rosetting by binding to CD44 on the E. NIH44-1, which immunoprecipitates a protein of 85 to 110 kDa with broad tissue distribution, was determined to be specific for CD44 based on comparison of its tissue distribution with multiple CD44-specific reference mAb and sequential immunoprecipitation with such mAb. Anticipating a role for many adhesion molecules in signal transduction, we studied the effect of CD44 mAb on T cell activation and observed that CD44 mAb dramatically augments T cell proliferation induced by CD3- and CD2-receptor-mediated activation. The augmentation of the response to immobilized CD3 mAb by exhaustively monocyte-depleted T cells indicates that augmentation can be mediated by binding to the T cell. Thus, our studies demonstrate specific new roles for CD44 in T cell adhesion and activation. Furthermore, we suggest that: 1) CD44 has a role in adhesion of cells of multiple lineages; and 2) CD44 may participate in adhesion not (only) by functioning as an adhesion receptor but rather by serving as an anchorage site for other adhesion molecules. |
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