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1.
A Tozeren  K L Sung    S Chien 《Biophysical journal》1989,55(3):479-487
A micromanipulation method is used to determine the adhesive energy density (gamma) between pairs of cytotoxic T cells (F1) and their target cells (JY: HLA-A2-B7-DR4,W6). gamma is defined as the energy per unit area that must be supplied to reduce the region of contact between a conjugated cell pair. Our analysis of the data indicates that the force applied by the micropipette on the cell is not uniformly distributed throughout the contact region as we had previously assumed (Sung, K. L. P., L. A. Sung, M. Crimmins, S. J. Burakoff, and S. Chien. 1986. Science (Wash. DC). 234: 1405-1408), but acts only at the edges of the contact region. We show that gamma is not constant during peeling but increases with decreasing contact area of the conjugated cell pairs F1-JY, F1-F1, and JY-JY in contrast to the constancy of gamma for typical engineering adhesives. This finding supports the notion that the cross-linking protein molecules slide towards the conjugated area across the leading edge of the separation while remaining attached to both cells. Our mathematical analysis shows that the elastic energy stored in the cross-links by the membrane tensions balances the diffusive forces that act against cross-bridge migration. The binding affinity between F1-JY is found to be approximately 15-20 times larger than the corresponding affinity for F1-F1. The number of binding sites of F1 for attachment to JY is approximately the same for binding F1 to another F1 and vary between 10(5) and 10(6).  相似文献   

2.
Measurements of the dimensions and membrane rotational frequency of individual erythrocytes steadily tank-treading in a rheoscope are used to deduce the surface shear viscosity of the membrane. The method is based on an integral energy principle which says that the power supplied to the tank-treading cell by the suspending fluid is equal to the rate at which energy is dissipated by viscous action in the membrane and cytoplasm. The integrals involved are formulated with the aid of an idealized mathematical model of the tank-treading red blood cell (RBC) (Keller and Skalak, 1982, J. Fluid Mech., 120:24-27) and evaluated numerically. The outcome is a surface-averaged value of membrane viscosity which is representative of a finite interval of membrane shear rate. The numerical values computed show a clear shear-thinning characteristic as well as a significant augmentation of viscosity with cell age and tend toward agreement with those determined for the rapid phase of shape recovery in micropipettes (Chien, S., K.-L. P. Sung, R. Skalak, S. Usami, and A. Tozeren, 1978, Biophys. J., 24:463-487). The computations also indicate that the rate of energy dissipation in the membrane is always substantially greater than that in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

3.
This paper presents an analytical and experimental methodology to determine the physical strength of cell adhesion to a planar membrane containing one set of adhesion molecules. In particular, the T lymphocyte adhesion due to the interaction of the lymphocyte function associated molecule 1 on the surface of the cell, with its counter-receptor, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), on the planar membrane, was investigated. A micromanipulation method and mathematical analysis of cell deformation were used to determine (a) the area of conjugation between the cell and the substrate and (b) the energy that must be supplied to detach a unit area of the cell membrane from its substrate. T lymphocytes stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) conjugated strongly with the planar membrane containing purified ICAM-1. The T lymphocytes attached to the planar membrane deviated occasionally from their round configuration by extending pseudopods but without changing the size of the contact area. These adherent cells were dramatically deformed and then detached when pulled away from the planar membrane by a micropipette. Detachment occurred by a gradual decrease in the radius of the contact area. The physical strength of adhesion between a PMA-stimulated T lymphocyte and a planar membrane containing 1,000 ICAM-1 molecules/micron 2 was comparable to the strength of adhesion between a cytotoxic T cell and its target cell. The comparison of the adhesive energy density, measured at constant cell shape, with the model predictions suggests that the physical strength of cell adhesion may increase significantly when the adhesion bonds in the contact area are immobilized by the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

4.
Cell-cell adhesion plays a fundamental role in tissue and organ development, cell mediated immunity and blood flow. In the present study a micro-mechanical model of specific adhesion is presented. Analytical expressions are derived for the adhesive energy density (gamma) at zero speed of peeling for the cases of immobile (trapped) as well as laterally mobile bonds. It is shown that gamma increases in both cases with the increasing density of bonds and with the binding of affinity of unstressed bonds. In the case of laterally mobile bonds gamma also increases with the extent of peeling. The analytical results are shown to be valid whether or not one takes into account of the bending stiffness of adhering membranes. It is also shown that gamma does not depend on the functional form of bond elasticity. The effect of the speed of peeling on the number density distribution of attached bonds is considered next. Numerical solutions for the energy required to separate conjugated cell pairs are presented. The theoretical predictions are then used to analyze experimental data on red cell aggregation and adhesion between a cytotoxic-T cell and its target cell. The results show that the binding affinity of unstressed bonds and their number density before conjugation can be obtained from data on slow peeling of cell-pairs. The information on the diffusivity of bonds, their stiffness and their rates of attachment and detachment are more difficult to obtain, requiring a set of experiments with increasing rates of separation (conjugation) of cell-pairs.  相似文献   

5.
The objective of this study was to determine the effect of receptor-ligand affinity on the strength of endothelial cell adhesion. Linear and cyclic forms of the fibronectin (Fn) cell-binding domain peptide Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) were covalently immobilized to glass, and Fn was adsorbed onto glass slides. Bovine aortic endothelial cells attached to the surfaces for 15 min. The critical wall shear stress at which 50% of the cells detached increased nonlinearly with ligand density and was greater with immobilized cyclic RGD than with immobilized linear RGD or adsorbed Fn. To directly compare results for the different ligand densities, the receptor-ligand dissociation constant and force per bond were estimated from data for the critical shear stress and contact area. Total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy was used to measure the contact area as a function of separation distance. Contact area increased with increasing ligand density. Contact areas were similar for the immobilized peptides but were greater on surfaces with adsorbed Fn. The dissociation constant was determined by nonlinear regression of the net force on the cells to models that assumed that bonds were either uniformly stressed or that only bonds on the periphery of the contact region were stressed (peeling model). Both models provided equally good fits for cells attached to immobilized peptides whereas the peeling model produced a better fit of data for cells attached to adsorbed Fn. Cyclic RGD and linear RGD both bind to the integrin alpha v beta 3, but immobilized cyclic RGD exhibited a greater affinity than did linear RGD. Receptor affinities of Fn adsorbed to glycophase glass and Fn adsorbed to glass were similar. The number of bonds was calculated assuming binding equilibrium. The peeling model produced good linear fits between bond force and number of bonds. Results of this study indicate that 1) bovine aortic endothelial cells are more adherent on immobilized cyclic RGD peptide than linear RGD or adsorbed Fn, 2) increased adhesion is due to a greater affinity between cyclic RGD and its receptor, and 3) the affinity of RGD peptides and adsorbed Fn for their receptors is increased after immobilization.  相似文献   

6.
Receptor-mediated cell adhesion is a central phenomenon in many physiological and biotechnological processes. Mechanical strength of adhesion is generally presumed to be related to chemical affinity of receptor/ligand bonds, but no experimental study has been previously directed toward this issue. Here we investigate the dependence of receptor/ligand adhesion strength on bond affinity using a radial fluid flow chamber assay to measure the force needed to detach polystyrene beads covalently coated with immunoglobulin G from glass surfaces covalently coated with protein A. A spectrum of animal species sources for immunoglobulin G permits examination of three decades of protein A/immunoglobulin G binding affinity. Our results for this model system demonstrate that adhesion strength varies with the logarithm of the binding affinity, consistent with a prediction from the theoretical model by Dembo et al. (Dembo, M., D.C. Torney, K. Saxman, and D. Hammer. 1988. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. Ser. B 234:55-83).  相似文献   

7.
Analyses of receptor-ligand interactions are important to the understanding of cellular adhesion. Traditional methods of measuring the three-dimensional (3D) dissociation constant (Kd) require at least one of the molecular species in solution and hence cannot be directly applied to the case of cell adhesion. We describe a novel method of measuring 2D binding characteristics of receptors and ligands that are attached to surfaces and whose bonds are subjected to forces. The method utilizes a common centrifugation assay to quantify adhesion. A model for the experiment has been formulated, solved exactly, and tested carefully. The model is stochastically based and couples the bond force to the binding affinity. The method was applied to examine tumor cell adherence to recombinant E-selectin. Satisfactory agreement was found between predictions and data. The estimated zero-force 2D Kd for E-selectin/carbohydrate ligand binding was approximately 5 x 10(3) microm(-2), and the bond interaction range was subangstrom. Our results also suggest that the number of bonds mediating adhesion was small (<5).  相似文献   

8.
M D Ward  D A Hammer 《Cell biophysics》1992,20(2-3):177-222
Many cell types modulate growth, differentiation, and motility through changes in cell substrate adhesion, including regulation of focal contact formation. Clustering of cell surface adhesion receptors is an essential early step in the development of focal contacts, and thus may influence cell physiology. In this paper, we present a theoretical framework to examine how cell surface chemistry affects receptor clustering. Our one-dimensional tape-peeling model couples the equations of mechanical equilibrium for a cell membrane with kinetic receptor-ligand binding relations. We considered two distinct model scenarios: Adhesion mediated by multiple receptor-ligand interactions of different length and specific binding of a single receptor type occurs in the presence of van der Waals attraction and nonspecific repulsion. In each case, nonuniform (wave-like) membrane morphologies are observed in certain parameter ranges that support the clustering of adhesion receptors. The formation of these morphologies is described in terms of a balance of membrane stresses; when cell-surface potential as a function of separation distance is symmetric between two potential energy minima, nonuniform morphologies are obtained. Increases in the chemical binding energy between receptor and ligand (e.g., increases in ligand density) or decreases in the membrane rigidity result in smaller wavelengths for nonuniform interfaces. Additionally, we show wave-like geometries appear only when the mechanical compliance of receptor-ligand bonds is within an intermediate range, and examine how the mobility of "repellers"--glycocalyx molecules that exert a nonspecific repulsive force--influences membrane morphology. We find fully mobile repellers always redistribute to prevent nonuniform morphologies.  相似文献   

9.
Thermodynamics of cell adhesion. II. Freely mobile repellers.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The equilibrium adhesion of a cell or vesicle to a substrate is analyzed in a theoretical model in which two types of mobile molecules in the cell membrane are of interest: receptors that can form bonds with fixed ligands in the substrate and repellers that repel the substrate. If the repulsion between the repeller molecule and substrate is greater than kT, there is substantial redistribution of the repellers from the contact area. Coexisting equilibrium states are observed having comparable free energies (a) with unstretched bonds and repeller redistribution and (b) with stretched bonds and partial redistribution.  相似文献   

10.
A. Grębecki 《Protoplasma》1984,123(2):116-134
Summary The unbranched ectoplasmic cylinder of monotacticA. proteus is always retracted toward the cell-substrate attachment sites. The retraction velocity increases from the adhesion sites toward any free distal body end in a linear way, which indicates the uniform contractility of the whole cylinder. Therefore, in the cells frontally attached all the ectoplasm moves forward, and in those adhering by the tail the whole ectoplasmic tube moves backward producing the full fountain phenomenon. With cell attachment at the middle body regions, which is most typical for normal locomotion, the whole ectoplasm is centripetally retracted from both body poles toward the adhesion zone, producing then the tail retraction in the posterior and incomplete fountain in the anterior body part. In unattached amoebae the whole peripheral tube is retracted toward its geometrical centre which coincides with its posterior closed end, producing therefore also a full fountain. It is generalized that the fountain arises always between an unattached front and the nearest attachment point behind its manifestation zone. The photographic records of movement and longitudinal velocity profiles of ectoplasmic retraction are identical on both sides of the attachment points, suggesting the same mechanism for the fountain movement as for the tail withdrawal. It is concluded therefore that not the axial endoplasmic arm of the fountain is active, but its peripheral arm built of the ectoplasm.All elements complicating the cell contour, as the constriction rings and ephemeral lateral pseudopodia, do not change their position in respect to the ectoplasmic material, but move together with it in respect to the substrate, i.e., the cytoskeleton moves as a whole. Loose glass rods attached by adhesion to cell surface also precisely follow the cytoskeleton movements, being transported toward the main locomotory adhesion zone established on the firm substrate, although the cell membrane as such behaves differently. It suggests a direct connection between the adhesion sites and the cytoskeleton.Study supported by Research Project II. 1 of the Polish Academy of Science.I dedicate this paper to the memory of Reginald J. Goldacre, deceased in December 1983, who twenty years ago introduced me to the study of amoebae.  相似文献   

11.
A simple model of a double-headed crossbridge is introduced to explain the retardation of force decay after an imposed stretch in skeletal muscle fibers under equilibrium conditions. The critical assumption in the model is that once one of the heads of a crossbridge is attached to one of the available actin sites, the attachment of the second head will be restricted to a level of strain determined by the attachment of the first head. The crossbridge structure, namely the connection of both heads of a crossbridge to the same tail region, is assumed to impose this constraint on the spatial configurations of crossbridge heads. The unique feature of the model is the prediction that, in the presence of a ligand (PPi, ADP, AMP-PNP) and absence of Ca2+, the halftime of force decay is many times larger than the inverse rate of detachment of a crossbridge head measured in solution. This prediction is in agreement with measured values of half-times of force decay in fibers under similar conditions (Schoenberg, M., and E. Eisenberg. 1985. Biophys. J. 48:863-871f). It is predicted that a crossbridge head is more likely to re-attach to its previously strained position than remain unattached while the other head is attached, leading to the slow decay of force. Our computations also show that the apparent cooperativity in crossbridge binding observed in experiments (Brenner, B., L. C. Yu, L. E. Greene, E. Eisenberg, and M. Schoenberg. 1986. Biophys. J. 50:1101-1108) can be partially accounted by the double-headed crossbridge attachment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Carbohydrate-specific cell adhesion is mediated by immobilized glycolipids   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We describe a technique for examining the ability of one important class of cell surface complex carbohydrates, glycosphingolipids, to mediate carbohydrate-specific cell recognition and adhesion. Analogs of natural glycosphingolipids were synthesized, consisting of 1-glycosyl derivatives of 3-deoxyceramide (N-palmitoyl-2-aminostearol) radiolabeled in the fatty acid portion. Methods were developed to efficiently adsorb both these synthetic glycolipids and natural glycosphingolipids (including gangliosides) from aqueous ethanol solution onto plastic wells. The glycolipids remained firmly attached to the surface in aqueous solutions, but could be recovered using detergents or organic solvents. The ability of the adsorbed glycolipids to elicit specific adhesion of intact hepatocytes was tested using specific adhesion of intact hepatocytes was tested using a cell adhesion assay based on that of McClay, D. R., Wessel, G. M., and Marchase, R. B. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 78, 4975-4979. When otherwise nonadhesive plastic surfaces were adsorbed with N-acetylglucosaminyl 3-deoxyceramide, they supported adhesion of 80-95% of the chicken hepatocytes added to the well. No adhesion above background levels (10-25%) was observed to surfaces adsorbed with other synthetic glycolipids including glucosyl, galactosyl, mannosyl, or lactosyl 3-deoxyceramide, 3-deoxyceramide, or to the naturally occurring glycosphingolipids, lactosyl ceramide or ganglioside GM1. Chicken hepatocyte adhesion to surfaces adsorbed with N-acetylglucosaminyl 3-deoxyceramide was inhibited by soluble N-acetylglucosamine (IC50 = 3 m M), but not by other soluble sugars. Rat hepatocytes adhered preferentially to surfaces adsorbed with lactosyl 3-deoxyceramide, but not to surfaces adsorbed with the N-acetylglucosaminyl derivative. These studies demonstrate the ability of adsorbed glucolipids to mediate carbohydrate- and cell-specific adhesion from intact cells. Using these techniques, the ability of naturally occurring complex glycosphingolipids to elicit specific cellular responses from a variety of cell types can be examined.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of cell attachment and cell spreading on the coated surfaces of two classes of carbohydrate-reactive proteins, enzymes and lectins, have been compared with those on fibronectin-coated surfaces with the following results: (a) A remarkable similarity between the kinetics of cell attachment to fibronectin-coated and glycosidase- coated surfaces was found. In contrast, cell attachment kinetics induced by lectin- and galactose oxidase-coated surfaces, in general, were strikingly different from those on fibronectin and glycosidase surfaces. The distinction between fibronectin- or glycosidase- and lectin- or galactose oxidase (an enzyme with lectin-type characteristics)-coated surfaces was further supported by the finding that cytochalasin B and EDTA inhibited cell attachment to fibronectin- and glycosidase-coated surfaces but not lectin-coated surfaces. (b) Fibronectin, if labeled and added to a cell suspension, showed only low or negligible interaction with the cell surface. However, fibronectin absorbed on plastic surfaces showed a high cell-attaching activity. It is assumed that fibronectin coated on plastic surfaces may form polyvalent attachment sites in contrast to its lower valency in aqueous solution. (c) Various inhibitors of cell attachment to both fibronectin- , galactose oxidase-, and lectin-coated surfaces were effective only during the first few minutes of the adhesion assay, after which time the attached cells became insensitive to the inhibitors. It is suggested that the initial specific recognition on either lectin-type or fibronectin-type surfaces is followed by an active cell-dependent attachment process. The primary role of the adhesion surface is to stimulate the cell-dependent attachment response. (d) Cells attached on tetravalent concanavalin A (Con A) spread very rapidly and quantitatively, whereas divalent succinyl Con A and monovalent Con A were effective stimulators of cell attachment but not cell spreading. Cross-linking of succinyl Con A restored the cell spreading activity. Tetravalent Con A surfaces specifically bind soluble glycoproteins, whereas succinyl Con A has a greatly reduced ability to bind the same glycoproteins. These results suggest that cross-linking of cell surface glycoproteins by the multivalent adhesive surface may trigger the cellular reaction leading to cell spreading.  相似文献   

14.
For many cell types, growth, differentiation, and motility are dependent on receptor-mediated adhesion to ligand-coated surfaces. Focal contacts are strong, specialized, adhesive connections between cell and substrate in which receptors aggregate and connect extracellular ligand to intracellular cytoskeletal molecules. In this paper, we present a mathematical model to examine how focal contact formation affects cellular adhesive strength. To calculate adhesive strength with and without focal contacts, we use a one-dimensional tape peeling analysis to determine the critical tension necessary to peel the membrane. Receptor-ligand bonds are modeled as adhesive springs. In the absence of focal contacts, we derive analytic expressions for the critical tension at low and high ligand densities and show how membrane morphology affects adhesion. Then, focal contacts are modeled as cytoplasmic nucleation centers which bind adhesion receptors. The extent of adhesive strengthening upon focal contact formation depends on the elastic rigidity of the cytoskeletal connections, which determines the structural integrity of the focal contact itself. We consider two limits to this elasticity, very weak and rigid. Rigid cytoskeletal connections give much greater attachment strengths. The dependence of attachment strength on measurable model parameters is quite different in these two limits, which suggests focal contact structure might be deduced from properly performed adhesion experiments. Finally, we compare our model to the adhesive strengthening response reported for glioma cell adhesion to fibronectin (Lotz et al., 1989. J. Cell Biol. 109:1795-1805). Our model successfully predicts the observed detachment forces at 4 degrees C and yields values for the number of fibronectin receptors per glioma cell and the density of cytoskeletal connection molecules (talin) involved in receptor clusters which are consistent with measurements for other cell types. Comparison of the model with data at 37 degrees C suggests that while cytoskeletal cross-linking and clustering of fibronectin receptors significantly increases adhesion strength, specific glioma cell-substratum attachment sites possess little mechanical rigidity and detach through a peeling mechanism, consistent with the view that these sites of < or = 15 nm cell-substrate separation are precursors to fully formed, elastically rigid focal contacts.  相似文献   

15.
Concentration of cytokinins (CKs) of zeatin-type (Z) and isopentyladenine-type (iP) were determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) technique in xylem sap and bulk leaf extract of the hemiparasiteMelampyrum arvense before and after attachment to the host (Capsella bursa pastoris). In all the samples Z-type were dominant, though the iP-type was also frequent. The results also demonstrate that in comparison with the unattached hemiparasite after attachment to the host the concentration of Z-type in xylem sap increased about 92 and 182 times in the light and dark phase, respectively, and that of the iP-type about 34 times in the two phases. The concentration of Z-type and iP-type in leaves expressed per dm3 of cell water was at the level of 10-7 M and 10-8 M, respectively in the unattached hemiparasite. After attachment, the concentration of CKs increased to 10-5 M and 10-6 M for Z-type and iP-type, respectively. In xylem sap the concentration of Z-type was at the level of 10-9 M and 10-7 M and in the unattached and attached hemiparasite, respectively. The concentrations of iP-type were 10-10 M and 10-8 M for the unattached and attached hemiparasite, respectively. The diurnal oscillation of CK concentration was evident in the unattached hemiparasite, but after attachment their level was nearly constant and independent of the diurnal cycle.  相似文献   

16.
When enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) attach and infect host cells, they induce a cytoskeletal rearrangement and the formation of cytoplasmic columns of actin filaments called pedestals. The attached EPEC and pedestals move over the surface of the host cell in an actin-dependent reaction [Sanger et al., 1996: Cell Motil Cytoskeleton 34:279-287]. The discovery that EPEC inserts the protein, translocated intimin receptor (Tir), into the membrane of host cells, where it binds the EPEC outer membrane protein, intimin [Kenny et al., 1997: Cell 91:511-520], suggests Tir serves two functions: tethering the bacteria to the host cell and providing a direct connection to the host's cytoskeleton. The sequence of Tir predicts a protein of 56.8 kD with three domains separated by two predicted trans-membrane spanning regions. A GST-fusion protein of the N-terminal 233 amino acids of Tir (Tir1) binds to alpha-actinin, talin, and vinculin from cell extracts. GST-Tir1 also coprecipitates purified forms of alpha-actinin, talin, and vinculin while GST alone does not bind these three focal adhesion proteins. Biotinylated probes of these three proteins also bound Tir1 cleaved from GST. Similar associations of alpha-actinin, talin, and vinculin were also detected with the C-terminus of Tir, i.e., Tir3, the last 217 amino acids. Antibody staining of EPEC-infected cultured cells reveals the presence of focal adhesion proteins beneath the attached bacteria. Our experiments support a model in which the cytoplasmic domains of Tir recruit a number of focal adhesion proteins that can bind actin filaments to form pedestals. Since pedestals also contain villin, tropomyosin and myosin II [Sanger et al., 1996: Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 34:279-287], the pedestals appear to be a novel structure sharing properties of both focal adhesions and microvilli.  相似文献   

17.
Transient capture of cells or model microspheres from flow over substrates sparsely coated with adhesive ligands has provided significant insight into the unbinding kinetics of leukocyte:endothelium adhesion complexes under external force. Whenever a cell is stopped by a point attachment, the full hydrodynamic load is applied to the adhesion site within an exceptionally short time-less than the reciprocal of the hydrodynamic shear rate (e.g., typically <0.01 s). The decay in numbers of cells or beads that remain attached to a surface has been used as a measure of the kinetics of molecular bond dissociation under constant force, revealing a modest increase in detachment rate at growing applied shear stresses. On the other hand, when detached under steady ramps of force with mechanical probes (e.g., the atomic force microscope and biomembrane force probe), P-selectin:PSGL-1 adhesion bonds break at rates that increase enormously under rising force, yielding 100-fold faster off rates at force levels comparable to high shear. The comparatively weak effect of force on tether survival in flow chamber experiments could be explained by a possible partition of the load amongst several bonds. However, a comprehensive understanding of the difference in kinetic behavior requires us to also inspect other factors affecting the dynamics of attachment-force buildup, such as the interfacial compliance of all linkages supporting the adhesion complex. Here, combining the mechanical properties of the leukocyte interface measured in probe tests with single-bond kinetics and the kinetics of cytoskeletal dissociation, we show that for the leukocyte adhesion complex P-selectin:PSGL-1, a detailed adhesive dynamics simulation accurately reproduces the tethering behavior of cells observed in flow chambers. Surprisingly, a mixture of 10% single bonds and 90% dimeric bonds is sufficient to fully match the data of the P-selectin:PSGL-1 experiments, with the calculated decay in fraction of attached cells still appearing exponential.  相似文献   

18.
Increased adhesion of lymphoid cells to glycated proteins.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The advanced glycation end-products are involved in the pathogenesis of vascular damages and other clinical complications in diabetic patients. The aim of this study was to investigate the adhesion of lymphoid cells to nonenzymatically glycated proteins in comparison with the unmodified substances. METHODS: Two cell lines (monocyte-macrophage line U937 and the T-cell line Jurkat) were used throughout the experiments. The cells were left to adhere to nonenzymatically glycated and native proteins coated on a 96-well flat-bottom plates and the cellular adhesion was registered as absorption at 550 nm following the method described by Ivanov and Kyurkchiev [G. Ivanov, S. Kyurkchiev, Effect of advanced glycosylation end-products on the activity of integrins expressed on U937 cells, Hum. Immunol. 59 (1998) 325-330.]. RESULTS: It was found that the monocytes had increased adhesion to nonenzymatically glycated proteins such as collagen, fibronectin and bovine serum albumin, whereas the T-cells had increased adhesion to the glycated collagen and bovine serum albumin but reduced adhesion to advanced glycated fibronectin. Experiments with different stimulating agents showed that phorbol-myriastate, acetate (A550 = 0.672 +/- 0.068, S.E.M., n = 40), glucose (A550 = 0.593 +/- 0.051, S.E.M., n = 40) and TNF-alpha (A550 = 0.580 +/- 0.042, S.E.M., n = 40) increased the adhesion of U937 cells to advanced glycated bovine serum albumin in comparison with the adhesion of the untreated cells (A550 = 0.260 +/- 0.046, S.E.M., n = 40). This is probably due to an upregulation of the expression or the activity of the receptors for the advanced glycation end-products. CONCLUSION: Based on the results obtained it is concluded that the receptors for nonenzymatically glycated proteins expressed on the surface of lymphoid cells could act also as cell adhesion molecules.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphomannan polysaccharides and fucoidan, a polymer of fucose 4-sulfate, have been demonstrated to inhibit adhesion of lymphocytes to tissue sections that contain high endothelial venules (Stoolman, L. M., T. S. Tenforde, and S. D. Rosen, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 99:1535-1540). We have investigated the potential cell surface carbohydrate receptors involved by quantitating adhesion of rat cervical lymph node lymphocytes to purified polysaccharides immobilized on otherwise inert polyacrylamide gels. One-sixth of the lymphocytes adhered specifically to surfaces derivatized with PPME (a phosphomannan polysaccharide prepared from Hansenula holstii yeast), whereas up to half of the cells adhered to surfaces derivatized with fucoidan. Several lines of evidence demonstrated that two distinct receptors were involved. Adhesion to PPME-derivatized gels was labile at 37 degrees C (decreasing to background levels within 120 min) whereas adhesion to fucoidan-derivatized gels was stable. Soluble PPME and other phosphomannans blocked adhesion only to PPME-derivatized gels; fucoidan and a structurally related fucan blocked adhesion to fucoidan-derivatized gels. Other highly charged anionic polysaccharides, such as heparin, did not block adhesion to either polysaccharide-derivatized gel. Adhesion to PPME-derivatized gels was dependent on divalent cations, whereas that to fucoidan-derivatized gels was not. The PPME-adherent lymphocytes were shown to be a subpopulation of the fucoidan-adhesive lymphocytes which contained both saccharide receptors. These data reveal that at least two distinct carbohydrate receptors can be found on peripheral lymphocytes.  相似文献   

20.
The content of abscisic acid (ABA) in abaxial leaf epidermis of the host (Capsella bursa pastoris) and the unattached hemiparasiteMelampyrum arvense showed diurnal changes. ABA content increased during the light period and declined rapidly upon the darkening of leaves. In an attached hemiparasite the content of ABA in the epidermis was maintained at an almost constant level irrespective of the diurnal cycle. As compared with the maximum level in the host, at the end of the light phase the content of ABA in abaxial epidermis constituted about 70 % and 164 % in the unattached and attached hemiparasite, respectively. No significant changes in ABA content were recorded in adaxial epidermis. In all the samples abaxial/adaxial epidermis ABA content ratio was about 3.6:1 in light phase. In darkness this ratio decreased to about 1.1:1 in the host and the unattached hemiparasite and did not show significant change after attachment. ABA content ratio in mesophyll was 1:0.7:1.5 for the host, the unattached, and attached hemiparasite, respectively. In comparison with the host the concentration of ABA in xylem sap of the hemiparasite constituted about 31 % and 152 % for the unattached and attachedM. arvense, respectively.  相似文献   

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