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1.
Bacterial adherence to human endothelial cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is frequently caused by exposure of the lung endothelium to circulating endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) and pulmonary infections frequently develop during the course of ARDS. The present studies demonstrate that LPS and interleukin 1 (IL-1, a mediator released by endothelial cells after exposure to LPS) enhance the adherence of Staphylococcus aureus to human umbilical vein endothelial cells. gamma-Interferon, another mediator that induces expression of some cell surface antigens on endothelial cells, had no effect on bacterial adherence. The adherence of bacteria to endothelium was increased by prior opsonization of the bacteria with fresh human serum and was reduced by prior absorption of the serum with bacteria before the use of the serum for opsonization. The capacity of LPS to increase bacterial adherence was time dependent and was maximally expressed after 6 h of exposure; it was blocked by exposure of endothelial cells to LPS in the presence of reduced temperature or dactinomycin (Actinomycin D). These observations suggest that circulating LPS not only can trigger the development of ARDS but also may predispose the lung to the development of pulmonary infections by increasing adherence of bacteria to endothelium.  相似文献   

2.
The identification of new signaling pathways critical for cardiac morphogenesis will contribute to our understanding of congenital heart disease (CHD), which remains a leading cause of mortality in newborn children worldwide. Signals mediated by semaphorin ligands and plexin receptors contribute to the intricate patterning of axons in the central nervous system. Here, we describe a related signaling pathway involving secreted class 3 semaphorins, neuropilins, and a plexin receptor, PlexinD1, expressed by endothelial cells. Interruption of this pathway in mice results in CHD and vascular patterning defects. The type of CHD caused by inactivation of PlexinD1 has previously been attributed to abnormalities of neural crest. Here, we show that this form of CHD can be caused by cell-autonomous endothelial defects. Thus, molecular programs that mediate axon guidance in the central nervous system also function in endothelial cells to orchestrate critical aspects of cardiac morphogenesis.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The interaction of monocytes with cultured large vessel venous and arterial endothelial cells (EC) and with cultured microvascular EC was studied. Analysis of time-lapse microcinematographic video recordings showed that monocytes adhere rapidly to the surface of EC and subsequently remain spherical and fixed to the initial site of adherence. Some monocytes adherent to EC stretch out within 30 to 90 min and migrate over the EC surface or become stretched for about 10 to 30 min and then detach from the EC surface and move rapidly over the EC monolayer. It was shown that the interaction of monocytes with EC is dynamic, that the morphology of monocytes adherent to EC changes constantly, and that stretching of the monocytes over the surface of the EC is not an inevitable and irreversible consequence of binding. A quantitative adherence assay was developed in which both the morphology and the number of monocytes bound to EC were determined. For each type of EC the number of monocytes bound to a single EC was found to be linearly related to the number of monocytes added and was lower for smaller EC. The adherence of monocytes to venous and arterial EC followed a different time course than the adherence to capillary EC and adherence to both types of macrovascular EC was higher than adherence to microvascular EC was higher than adherence to microvascular EC. The percentage of adherent monocytes with a stretched morphology was lower when these cells were adherent to capillary EC than to both types of macrovascular EC and increased upon addition of serum. Adherence of monocytes to venous, arterial, and capillary EC was partially inhibited by mAb directed against the alpha-chain of lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1 or C3bi receptor (with mAb LM2/1, but not with mAb OKM1) and by mAb against the common beta-chain of the three leukocyte adhesion molecules. The degree of inhibition of monocyte adherence to EC by mAb against lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1 alpha and the common beta-chain was dependent on the type of EC and was higher for venous EC (57 to 70% inhibition) than for arterial (40 to 44% inhibition) and capillary (44 to 49% inhibition) EC. Inhibition of monocyte adherence obtained with anti-C3bi receptor-alpha mAb was similar for each EC type. mAb against p150, 95 did not affect adherence. None of the mAb could block binding completely; combinations of the mAb also did not result in increased inhibition of monocyte adherence to EC.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We demonstrated previously that thrombin stimulation of human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAEC) results in release of choline lysophospholipids [lysophosphatidylcholine (lysoPtdCho) and lysoplasmenylcholine (lysoPlsCho)]. These amphiphilic metabolites have been implicated in arrhythmogenesis following the onset of myocardial ischemia, but studies examining their direct effects on the vasculature remain limited. We and others have shown that thrombin and lysoPtdCho can increase cell surface adhesion molecules and adherence of circulating inflammatory cells to the endothelium. This study supports our hypothesis that these changes may be mediated, at least in part, by lysoPlsCho, thus implicating this metabolite as an inflammatory mediator in the coronary vasculature and a modulator of the progression of atherosclerosis. Apical stimulation of HCAEC with thrombin resulted in the production and release of choline lysophospholipids from the apical surface of the HCAEC monolayer. Basolateral stimulation had no effect on choline lysophospholipid production or release from either the apical or basolateral surface of the HCAEC monolayer. Incubation of HCAEC with lysoPlsCho or lysoPtdCho resulted in similar increases in HCAEC surface expression of P-selectin and E-selectin. Furthermore, lysoPlsCho increased cell surface expression of P-selectin, E-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 with a time course similar to that of thrombin stimulation. Increased presence of cell surface adhesion molecules may contribute to the significant increase in adherence of neutrophils to either thrombin- or lysoPlsCho-stimulated HCAEC. These results demonstrate that the presence of thrombin at sites of vascular injury in the coronary circulation, resulting in increased choline lysophospholipid release from the HCAEC apical surface, has the potential to propagate vascular inflammation by upregulation of adhesion molecules and recruitment of circulating inflammatory cells to the endothelium. endothelium; arrhythmogenesis; inflammation; lysophospholipids  相似文献   

7.
Summary We studied the interaction of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) with umbilical vein endothelial cells infected with herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1. PMNs labeled with51Cr were added to endothelial monolayers at varying times after infection and their adherence assessed 1 h later. Granulocyte adherence (GA) to uninfected cells averaged 26.5±1.9%. Increased adherence began 6 h postinfection and rose to a maximum at 20 to 24 h. HSV-1 glycoproteins seemed to mediate the increase in GA: tunicamycin treatment of infected monolayers for 18 h abolished the increased GA as did incubation of infected cells with F(ab')2 fragments prepared from human antiserum containing HSV-1 antibody. Supported by grants R01-AA-06029 and T32-AA07233 from the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and R01-HL-28220 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.  相似文献   

8.
Microbial adherence to mucosal surfaces is an important first step in the initiation of the pathogenic process in the oral cavity. Candida albicans, the most adherent and pathogenic Candida species, utilizes a variety of mechanisms to adhere to human tissues. Although the strongest mechanism of adherence involves mannoprotein adhesins on C. albicans, cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH) plays an important role in the adherence process by providing hydrophobic interactions that turn the initial attachment between the yeast and a surface into a strong bond. Recent cell wall analytical and comparative studies showed that, Candida dubliniensis, unlike C. albicans, possesses cell surface variations that allow it to be constantly hydrophobic, regardless of growth temperature. Based on these observations, the present study was designed to compare the adherence abilities of C. dubliniensis and C. albicans to pooled human buccal epithelial cells (BEC), in regards to their cell surface hydrophobicity. Ten C. albicans and nine C. dubliniensis isolates, as well as the C. albicans hydrophobic variant A9V10 were evaluated for adherence with BEC using visual aggregation in the wells of a microtiter plate and microscopic examination. All 11 C. albicans isolates failed to show adherence to BEC, visually or microscopically, when grown at 37 degrees C. The same isolates, however, showed significant increase in aggregation and microscopic adherence to BEC when grown at 25 degrees C. All C. dubliniensis isolates tested and the A9V10 C. albicans hydrophobic variant resulted in visual aggregation and adhered to BEC when grown at either temperature. The findings from this study show that, based on comparative adherence results and growth temperature changes, C. dubliniensis seems to have greater adherence to BEC than do typical C. albicans strains and that hydrophobic interactions seem to be the mechanism of adherence involved. Although many questions remain to be answered regarding the clinical implications of this observed in vitro enhanced adherence of C. dubliniensis to human BEC, these findings support the establishment of this novel species as a clinically significant yeast.  相似文献   

9.
Bovine erythrocytes, which normally lack phosphatidyl choline in their membranes, when treated with either H2O2 or diamide (1-3 mM), showed a partial appearance of phosphatidyl ethanolamine (PE 40%) and phosphatidyl serine (PS, 30-33%) in the external leaflet of the bilayer and a concomitant increased (four- to five-fold) propensity to adhere to cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells. Similar treatment of normal human erythrocytes caused an alteration in the organization of the phospholipid bilayer and also resulted in their increased adherence to endothelial cells derived either from human umbilical vein or bovine aorta. Treatment of RBCs with H2O2 at low concentration (0.5 mM) resulted in cross-linking of spectrin without significant changes in the orientation of aminophospholipids but the RBCs exhibited 15-20% increase in adherence to endothelial cells. Pretreatment of either human or bovine erythrocytes with antioxidants such as vitamin E (2 mM) prevented both oxidant-induced reorganization of phospholipids in the bilayer and enhancement of adherence to endothelial cells. Introduction of either phosphatidyl serine or phosphatidyl ethanolamine but not phosphatidyl choline into erythrocyte membranes increased their adherence to endothelial cells threefold. Oxidant-treated RBCs exhibited enhanced binding and fluorescence of Merocyanine 540 dye (MC-540), which is sensitive to the packing of lipids in the lipid bilayer. On flow cytometric analysis, 78% of H2O2 (0.5 mM)-treated erythrocytes compared to 30% of untreated RBCs exhibited MC-540 binding and fluorescence, indicating differences in the lipid packing in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. Oxidant-treated erythrocytes adhere preferentially to endothelial cells rather than to bovine aortic smooth muscle cells and skin fibroblasts. It is suggested that the alterations in the erythrocyte membrane surface due to spectrin cross-linking and the organization of the phospholipids concomitant with less ordered packing in the external leaflet of the bilayer, either induced by oxidative manipulation in normal RBC or in pathological erythrocytes, play a role in erythrocyte-endothelial cell interaction.  相似文献   

10.
The major molecular signals of pancreatic exocrine development are largely unknown. We examine the role of fibroblast growth factor 7 (FGF7) in the final induction of pancreatic amylase-containing exocrine cells from induced-pancreatic progenitor cells derived from human embryonic stem (hES) cells. Our protocol consisted in three steps: Step I, differentiation of definitive endoderm (DE) by activin A treatment of hES cell colonies; Step II, differentiation of pancreatic progenitor cells by re-plating of the cells of Step I onto 24-well plates at high density and stimulation with all-trans retinoic acid; Step III, differentiation of pancreatic exocrine cells with a combination of FGF7, glucagon-like peptide 1 and nicotinamide. The expression levels of pancreatic endodermal markers such as Foxa2, Sox17 and gut tube endoderm marker HNF1β were up-regulated in both Step I and II. Moreover, in Step III, the induced cells expressed pancreatic markers such as amylase, carboxypeptidase A and chymotrypsinogen B, which were similar to those in normal human pancreas. From day 8 in Step III, cells immunohistochemically positive for amylase and for carboxypeptidase A, a pancreatic exocrine cell product, were induced by FGF7. Pancreatic progenitor Pdx1-positive cells were localized in proximity to the amylase-positive cells. In the absence of FGF7, few amylase-positive cells were identified. Thus, our three-step culture protocol for human ES cells effectively induces the differentiation of amylase- and carboxypeptidase-A-containing pancreatic exocrine cells.  相似文献   

11.
Interactions between monocytes and endothelial cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, and monocyte adhesion to arterial endothelium is one of the earliest events in atherogenesis. Work presented in this study examined human monocyte adherence to primary human aortic endothelial cells following monocyte infection with Chlamydia pneumoniae, an intracellular pathogen associated with atherosclerosis by a variety of sero-epidemiological, pathological and functional studies. Infected monocytes exhibited enhanced adhesion to aortic endothelial cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Pre-treatment of C. pneumoniae with heat did not effect the organism's capacity to enhance monocyte adhesion, suggesting that heat-stable chlamydial antigens such as chlamydial lipopolysaccharide (cLPS) mediated monocyte adherence. Indeed, treatment of monocytes with cLPS was sufficient to increase monocyte adherence to endothelial cells, and increased adherence of infected or cLPS-treated monocytes could be inhibited by the LPS antagonist lipid X. Moreover, C. pneumoniae-induced adherence could be inhibited by incubating monocytes with a mAb specific to the human beta 2-integrin chain, suggesting that enhanced adherence resulted from increased expression of these adhesion molecules. These data show that C. pneumoniae can enhance the capacity of monocytes to adhere to primary human aortic endothelial cells. The enhanced adherence exhibited by infected monocytes may increase monocyte residence time in vascular sites with reduced wall shear stress and promote entry of infected cells into lesion-prone locations.  相似文献   

12.
Sessile bacteria show phenotypical, biochemical, and morphological differences from their planktonic counterparts. Curli, extracellular structures important for biofilm formation, are only produced at temperatures below 30 C in Escherichia coli K-12 strains. In this report, we show that E. coli K-12 can produce curli at 37 C when grown as a biofilm community. The curli-expressing strain formed more biofilms on polyurethane sheets than the curli-deficient strain under growth temperatures of both 25 C and 37 C. Curli are required for the formation of a three-dimensional mature biofilm, with characteristic water channels and pillars of bacteria. Observations by electron microscopy revealed the presence at the surfaces of the curli-deficient mutant in biofilm of flagella and type I pili. A wild-type curli-expressing E. coli strain significantly adhered to several lines of human uroepithelial cells, more so than an isogenic curlideficient strain. The finding that curli are expressed at 37 C in biofilm and enhance bacterial adherence to mammalian host cells suggests an important role for curli in pathogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
While Candida albicans is the most significant fungal pathogen for humans, Candida glabrata accounts for an increasing number of infections. Little is known about how C.?glabrata interacts with the innate immune system, the first line of defense against such organisms. The C.?glabrata adhesin Epa1p was previously shown to bind mammalian epithelial cells. We hypothesized that Epa1p mediates unique, nonopsonic binding to macrophages, leading to induction of immune responses. We found that Epa1p mediated adhesion by both C.?glabrata (Cg) and transformed Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc(EPA1) ) to human macrophage-like cells, including Thp1 and U937 lines, and donor PBMCs. Adhesion was distinct from described mechanisms such as Dectin-1. Epa1p expression was necessary and sufficient for S.?cerevisiae binding and phagocytosis, the latter of which was actin-mediated. Sc(EPA1) induced inflammatory cytokine production (IL-8 and TNF-α) by human PBMC-derived macrophages. Despite expressing Epa1p and binding to macrophages, Cg avoided phagocytosis and cytokine induction. In contrast to human results, in murine cell models (RAW264.7, J774A.1, and C57BL/6-derived cells), Epa1p-mediated binding was only revealed after blocking the Dectin-1 system. Recognition of Epa1p represents a novel mechanism by which human innate immune cells bind fungi, and for Sc(EPA1) results in phagocytosis and subsequent cytokine production.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Previously, we used the ability of the higher eukaryotic positive-strand RNA virus brome mosaic virus (BMV) to replicate in yeast to show that the yeast LSM1 gene is required for recruiting BMV RNA from translation to replication. Here we extend this observation to show that Lsm1p and other components of the Lsm1p-Lsm7p/Pat1p deadenylation-dependent mRNA decapping complex were also required for translating BMV RNAs. Inhibition of BMV RNA translation was selective, with no effect on general cellular translation. We show that viral genomic RNAs suitable for RNA replication were already distinguished from nonreplication templates at translation, well before RNA recruitment to replication. Among mRNA turnover pathways, only factors specific for deadenylated mRNA decapping were required for BMV RNA translation. Dependence on these factors was not only a consequence of the nonpolyadenylated nature of BMV RNAs but also involved the combined effects of the viral 5' and 3' noncoding regions and 2a polymerase open reading frame. High-resolution sucrose density gradient analysis showed that, while mutating factors in the Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex completely inhibited viral RNA translation, the levels of viral RNA associated with ribosomes were only slightly reduced in mutant yeast. This polysome association was further verified by using a conditional allele of essential translation initiation factor PRT1, which markedly decreased polysome association of viral genomic RNA in the presence or absence of an LSM7 mutation. Together, these results show that a defective Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex inhibits BMV RNA translation primarily by stalling or slowing the elongation of ribosomes along the viral open reading frame. Thus, factors in the Lsm1p-7p/Pat1p complex function not only in mRNA decapping but also in translation, and both translation and recruitment of BMV RNAs to viral RNA replication are regulated by a cell pathway that transfers mRNAs from translation to degradation.  相似文献   

16.
The MNT1 gene of the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is involved in O-glycosylation of cell wall and secreted proteins and is important for adherence of C. albicans to host surfaces and for virulence. Here we describe the molecular analysis of CaMNT2, a second member of the MNT1-like gene family in C. albicans. Mnt2p also functions in O-glycosylation. Mnt1p and Mnt2p encode partially redundant alpha-1,2-mannosyltransferases that catalyze the addition of the second and third mannose residues in an O-linked mannose pentamer. Deletion of both copies of MNT1 and MNT2 resulted in reduction in the level of in vitro mannosyltransferase activity and truncation of O-mannan. Both the mnt2Delta and mnt1Delta single mutants were significantly reduced in adherence to human buccal epithelial cells and Matrigel-coated surfaces, indicating a role for O-glycosylated cell wall proteins or O-mannan itself in adhesion to host surfaces. The double mnt1Deltamnt2Delta mutant formed aggregates of cells that appeared to be the result of abnormal cell separation. The double mutant was attenuated in virulence, underlining the importance of O-glycosylation in pathogenesis of C. albicans infections.  相似文献   

17.
Candida glabrata has emerged as one of the most common causes of candidosis. In order to identify factors that are necessary for viability and pathogenicity of this fungal pathogen, we analysed the role of the KEX2 gene, which codes for a regulatory endoproteinase that is known to process certain virulence factors in Candida albicans. The KEX2 gene from C. glabrata was cloned and found to have 51% and 62% identity and high structural similarities to the homologous counterparts in C. albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. KEX2 was expressed at all time points investigated during growth in complex medium. In order to investigate the role of this putative regulatory proteinase, Kex2-deficient mutants were produced. In addition to known kex2 phenotypes, such as pH and calcium hypersensitivity, the mutants grew in cellular aggregates and were found to be hypersensitive to several antifungal drugs that target the cell membrane, including azoles, amorolfine and amphotericin B. Ultrastructural investigation after exposure to low doses of itraconazole showed azole-specific alterations such as enlarged vacuoles and proliferation of the cytoplasmatic membrane in the kex2 mutants, but not in the control strains. In contrast, antifungals such as 5-flucytosine and hydroxypyridones inhibited growth of the kex2 mutants and the control strains to the same extent. In an in vitro model of oral candidosis, kex2 mutants showed reduced tissue damage in the presence of itraconazole compared with the control infections. These data suggest that Kex2 is involved in the processing of proteins that are essential for cell surface integrity of C. glabrata.  相似文献   

18.
Vasodilator actions of insulin are mediated by signaling pathways involving phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) and Akt that lead to activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) in endothelium. Signaling molecules immediately upstream and downstream from PI 3-kinase involved with production of NO in response to insulin have not been previously identified. In this study, we evaluated roles of insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) and phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK-1) in production of NO. The fluorescent dye 4,5-diamine fluorescein diacetate was used to directly measure NO in NIH-3T3(IR) cells transiently cotransfected with eNOS and various IRS-1 or PDK-1 constructs. In control cells, transfected with only eNOS, insulin stimulated a rapid dose-dependent increase in NO. Overexpression of wild-type IRS-1 increased the maximal insulin response 3-fold. Overexpression of IRS1-F6 (mutant that does not bind PI 3-kinase) or an antisense ribozyme against IRS-1 substantially inhibited insulin-stimulated production of NO. Likewise, overexpression of wild-type PDK-1 enhanced insulin-stimulated production of NO, whereas a kinase-inactive mutant PDK-1 inhibited this action of insulin. Qualitatively similar results were observed in vascular endothelial cells. Production of NO by a calcium-dependent mechanism in response to lysophosphatidic acid was unaffected by either wild-type or mutant IRS-1 and PDK-1. We conclude that IRS-1 and PDK-1 play necessary roles in insulin-signaling pathways leading to activation of eNOS. Furthermore, classical Ca2+-mediated pathways for activation of eNOS are separable from IRS-1- and PDK-1-dependent insulin-signaling pathways.  相似文献   

19.
In order to understand the role of actin microfilaments in the apoptotic process, we followed their evolution during tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF)-induced apoptosis in bovine aortic endothelial (BAE) cells. Using Western blotting analysis and immunofluorescence microscopy, we observed that the actin microfilaments network was disrupted in apoptotic cells. Depolymerization of F-actin was concomitant with internucleosomal DNA degradation and with the morphological changes associated with apoptotic cell death. However, using the actin microfilament disrupting agent, cytochalasin, we present evidence that the formation of blebs leading to apoptotic cell fragmentation requires neopolymerization of actin. Indeed, in the presence of cyochalasin, induction of apoptosis (internucleosomal DNA degradation) in BAE cells by TNF and cycloheximide was not associated with these classical morphological markers of apoptosis. Moreover, when added to BAE cells showing incipient apoptotic fragmentation, cytochalasin E reversed this process. We also observed an accumulation of actin at the basis of the apoptotic bodies in formation in these cells. Together, these results suggest that the actin network of flattened cells is disrupted concomitantly to the morphological modifications associated to the apoptotic cell death, and that the cytochalasin-sensitive reorganisation of actin is required to the formation of apoptotic blebs.  相似文献   

20.
Neutrophil adherence to cytokine-activated endothelial cell (EC) monolayers depends on the expression of the endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (ELAM-1). The ligand for ELAM-1 is the sialylated Lewis-x antigen (SLe(x)) structure. The selectin LAM-1 (or LECAM-1) has been described as one of the SLe(x)-presenting glycoproteins involved in neutrophil binding to ELAM-1. Other presenter molecules have not yet been described. Our data demonstrate that the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-like surface molecules on neutrophils--known as the nonspecific cross-reacting antigens (NCAs)--are involved in neutrophil adherence to monolayers of IL-1-beta-activated EC. The NCAs are recognized by CD66 (NCA-160 and NCA-90) and CD67 (NCA-95). Because NCA-95 and NCA-90 have previously been found to be phosphatidylinositol (PI)-linked, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) neutrophils (which lack PI-linked surface proteins) were tested as well. PNH neutrophils showed a diminished binding to activated EC. CD66 (on PNH cells still recognizing the transmembrane NCA-160 form) still inhibited the adherence of PNH cells to IL-1-beta-activated EC, but to a limited extent. Soluble CEA(-related) antigens inhibited normal neutrophil adherence as well, whereas neutrophil transmigration was unaffected. Sialidase-treatment as well as CD66 preclearing abolished the inhibitory capacity of the CEA(-related) antigens. The binding of soluble CEA antigens to IL-1-beta-pretreated EC was blocked by anti-ELAM-1. These soluble antigens, as well as the neutrophil NCA-160 and NCA-90, both recognized by CD66 antibodies, presented the SLe(x) determinant. Together, these findings indicate that the CD66 antigens (i.e., NCA-160/NCA-90) function as presenter molecules of the SLe(x) oligosaccharide structures on neutrophils that bind to ELAM-1 on EC.  相似文献   

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