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1.
Leukocyte adherence is mediated by a superfamily of glycoproteins denoted LFA-1 (the lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1), Mac-1 (macrophage antigen-1) and p150,95. The relative importance of these in mediating human monocyte adherence to endothelium, and the biochemical mechanisms which modulate these events, are not understood. In this report, the role of protein kinase C (pkC) in regulating human monocyte adherence to endothelial cells has been investigated. Addition of phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu), which specifically stimulates pkC, caused a dose-dependent increase in their adherence to monolayers of bovine aortic endothelial cells. 4 alpha-phorbol didecanoate (4 alpha-PDD), a structural analogue of PDBu which does not stimulate pkC, failed to increase monocyte adhesion. PDBu also produced a dose-dependent increase in the expression of both Mac-1 and p150,95. The pkC-stimulated adherence of monocytes to endothelium was inhibited by the presence of a monoclonal antibody to Mac-1, while monoclonal antibodies to p150,95 and LFA-1 did not influence adherence. It is concluded that monocyte adherence to endothelial cells is regulated through a pkC-dependent mechanism; moreover, this process is mediated primarily via the Mac-1 adhesion glycoprotein.  相似文献   

2.
The regulation of Mac-1, LFA-1, and p150,95 expression during leukocyte differentiation was examined. LFA-1 was present on almost all cell types studied. Both Mac-1 and p150,95 were present on the more mature cells of the myelomonocytic series, but only p150,95 was detected on some B cell lines and cloned cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) stimulation of B chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells dramatically increased p150,95 expression. The resultant Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 phenotype resembled hairy cell leukemia, a B cell plasmacytoid leukemia. The promonocytic cell line U937 and the promyeloblastic cell line HL-60 expressed only LFA-1. Monocytic differentiation of U937 cells was stimulated by PMA, and induced the concomitant expression of Mac-1 and p150,95, with more p150,95 induced than Mac-1. Granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) stimulation of U937 cells gave similar results. PMA-stimulated monocytic differentiation of the HL-60 cell line also induced expression of both Mac-1 and p150,95. The number of p150,95 molecules on PMA-stimulated U937 and HL-60 cells were 5 X 10(5) and 3 X 10(5), respectively. Retinoic acid stimulated myeloid differentiation of HL-60 cells and induced expression of both Mac-1 and p150,95. These cells acquired a Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 profile that resembled that of granulocytes, with more Mac-1 than p150,95 induced. GM-CSF stimulation of HL-60 cells induced a similar Mac-1 and p150,95 phenotype. The contributions of Mac-1, LFA-1, and p150,95 to aggregation of PMA-differentiated U937 cells were assessed. Monoclonal antibodies to the beta subunit and the LFA-1 alpha subunit, but not those to p150,95 or Mac-1 alpha subunit, inhibited this homotypic adherence.  相似文献   

3.
Patients with the leukocyte adhesion deficiency (LAD) syndrome have a genetic defect in the common beta 2-chain (CD18) of the leukocyte integrins. This defect can result in the absence of cell surface expression of all three members of the leukocyte integrins. We investigated the capacity of T cell clones obtained from the blood of an LAD patient and of normal T cell clones to adhere to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (EC). Adhesion of the number of LAD T cells to unstimulated EC was approximately half of that of leukocyte function-associated antigen (LFA)-1+ T cells. Stimulation of EC with human rTNF-alpha resulted in an average 2- and 2.5-fold increase in adhesion of LFA-1+ and LFA-1- cells, respectively. This effect was maximal after 24 h and lasted for 48 to 72 h. The involvement of surface structures known to participate in cell adhesion (integrins, CD44) was tested by blocking studies with mAb directed against these structures. Adhesion of LFA-1+ T cells to unstimulated EC was inhibited (average inhibition of 58%) with mAb to CD11a or CD18. Considerably less inhibition of adhesion occurred with mAb to CD11a or CD18 (average inhibition, 20%) when LFA-1+ T cells were incubated with rTNF-alpha-stimulated EC. The adhesion of LFA-1- T cells to EC stimulated with rTNF-alpha, but not to unstimulated EC, was inhibited (average inhibition, 56%) by incubation with a mAb directed to very late antigen (VLA)-4 (CDw49d). In contrast to LAD T cell clones and the LFA-1+ T cell line Jurkat, mAb to VLA-4 did not inhibit adhesion of normal LFA-1+ T cell clones to EC, whether or not the EC had been stimulated with rTNF-alpha. We conclude that the adhesion molecule pair LFA-1/intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 plays a major role in the adhesion of LFA-1+ T cell clones derived from normal individuals to unstimulated EC. Adhesion of LFA-1-T cells to TNF-alpha-stimulated EC is mediated by VLA-4/vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1 interactions. Since we were unable to reduce significantly the adhesion of cultured normal LFA-1+ T cells to 24 h with TNF-alpha-stimulated endothelium with antibodies that block LFA-1/ICAM-1 or VLA-4/VCAM-1 interactions, and lectin adhesion molecule-1 and endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 appeared not to be implicated, other as yet undefined cell surface structures are likely to participate in T cell/EC interactions.  相似文献   

4.
Cell-cell adhesion plays an important role in monocyte function. To investigate the molecular basis for monocyte adhesion, we used recombinant interferon-gamma to induce the formation of homotypic monocyte adhesions. The induction of homotypic adhesions correlated with the increased expression of the LFA-1 membrane molecule. LFA-1 surface expression was increased twofold, whereas expression levels of other monocyte surface molecules including CR3 and p150,95 were unchanged. The direct involvement of LFA-1 in monocyte adhesion was addressed by anti-LFA-1 monoclonal antibody inhibition of homotypic adhesions. Two monoclonal antibodies to distinct epitopes on the LFA-1 alpha-chain completely inhibited homotypic adhesions. Antibodies to a variety of other monocyte surface molecules, often present at higher cell surface density than LFA-1, did not inhibit homotypic adhesion. A panel of monoclonal antibodies that recognized different functional epitopes on the LFA-1 alpha-chain inhibited homotypic monocyte in a hierarchy identical to that observed in previous studies of cell-mediated cytotoxicity. These findings suggest that LFA-1 serves an adhesive function for human mononuclear phagocytes. In addition to providing a molecular basis for homotypic monocyte adhesions, the results suggest a more general role for LFA-1 in monocyte adhesion reactions.  相似文献   

5.
Human monocyte adhesion to vascular endothelium is an important transitional event in mononuclear phagocyte development. The molecular mechanism involved in monocyte adhesion to endothelial cells was studied using purified human monocytes and a panel of monoclonal antibodies (MAb). The purified human monocytes were phenotypically characterized and expressed relatively low levels of HLA class II antigens. The monocytes were labeled with Indium-111 to provide high specific activity and a sensitive measure of adhesion. Using this radionuclide adhesion assay, monocytes demonstrated consistent and reproducible adhesion to a confluent monolayer of human umbilical vein-derived endothelial cells. To identify the cell surface molecules involved in human monocyte-endothelial cell adhesion, 15 MAb to 11 monocyte surface structures were used to attempt to inhibit adhesion. MAb recognizing 10 monocyte cell surface molecules did not inhibit adhesion. In contrast, MAb recognizing the alpha and beta subunits of LFA-1 (lymphocyte function-associated) significantly inhibited monocyte adhesion to endothelial cells. Monocyte adhesion was comparably inhibited by F(ab')2 and intact MAb. Significant inhibition was observed at 5 micrograms/ml of anti-LFA-1 MAb. These results indicate that the alpha and beta subunits of the LFA-1 membrane molecule are involved in human monocyte-endothelial cell adhesions.  相似文献   

6.
p150,95 is a member of the beta 2 family of integrins, which includes both LFA-1 and Mac-1. These molecules are known to play a role in the adhesion of lymphocytes, granulocytes, and monocytes to various cell types including vascular endothelium. p150,95 is presumed to have an adhesive function because of its structural relationship to the other beta 2 integrins and the ability of anti-p150,95 mAb to inhibit some myeloid cell interactions with tumor cells, endothelial cells, and other substrates. In an endeavor to demonstrate directly that p150,95 can act as an adhesion molecule, we raised a mAb (CBRp150/4G1) to the alpha subunit of p150,95, which allows for the purification of functional intact p150,95 heterodimers. The antibody was selected by using a high pH elution ELISA. The assay was designed to select for antibodies directed to the alpha-chain of p150,95, which could be readily dissociated from p150,95 under conditions of high pH and 2 mM MgCl2. p150,95 purified under these conditions with CBRp150/4G1-Sepharose could be immunoprecipitated by using antibodies to the alpha- and beta-chains of p150,95 indicating that the structural integrity of the heterodimer was preserved during purification and elution. Elution in the absence of divalent cations yielded primarily dissociated alpha and beta subunits. Other antibodies previously made to p150,95 alpha-chain such as SHCL3 were greatly reduced in their efficiency of yielding intact heterodimer under these conditions. Mapping of the epitopes by using chimeric molecules of p150,95/Mac-1 revealed that antibodies that react with the divalent cation sites of p150,95 are inferior for the purification of intact p150,95. The adhesive capacity of p150,95 was demonstrated by the specific binding of 18-h rIL-1 beta or LPS-stimulated endothelial cells to purified p150,95 absorbed to plastic microtiter plates. These results indicate that p150,95 can function independently as an adhesion molecule and that it can interact with a counter-receptor on stimulated endothelium.  相似文献   

7.
Activated monocytic cells and neutrophils adhere to substrates coated with a wide variety of proteins including albumins, catalase, casein, and various extracellular matrix proteins. This adhesion can be specifically inhibited by antibodies directed to the beta 2 integrin subunit. This adhesion to protein substrates shares some similarities with two known protein-protein recognition systems with little apparent binding specificity, namely, the interactions of heat shock proteins and histocompatibility antigens with denatured proteins or peptides. Cell adhesion and affinity chromatography experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that monocytes and neutrophils adhere to and migrate on protein substrates due to the presence of cell surface receptors that recognize common protein structures such as denatured protein epitopes. Adhesion experiments revealed that activated monocytic cells adhere more rapidly and extensively on substrates coated with denatured protein versus native protein. Both adhesion and migration on such substrates in vitro was dependent on beta 2 integrins since blocking antibodies completely interfered with these cellular responses. Affinity chromatography experiments revealed that the Mac-1 and p150,95 integrins could be isolated from monocyte-differentiated HL-60 cells or neutrophils on a denatured protein-Sepharose column. Much greater yields of the receptors were obtained on a denatured versus native protein Sepharose column. The binding of these receptors was specific in that the LFA-1 beta 2 integrin did not bind to the denatured protein column. These data provide evidence that the adhesion of activated monocytes and neutrophils to many protein substrates in vitro is due to the ability of Mac-1 and p150,95 to directly bind to denatured proteins. A model of leukocyte adhesion and invasion whereby activated leukocytes denature extracellular proteins during diapedesis, making them suitable for recognition by beta 2 integrins, is proposed.  相似文献   

8.
We have isolated cDNA clones encoding the beta subunit of the human LFA-1, Mac-1, and p150,95 family of leukocyte adhesion proteins. The deduced 769-amino-acid sequence defines a cysteine-rich polypeptide with the characteristic features of an integral membrane protein. Peptide sequence data, Northern blot analysis, and Southern blot analysis suggest that a single gene encodes the beta subunit of all three leukocyte adhesion proteins. There is 45% homology between the beta subunit sequence and band III of integrin, a chick fibronectin and laminin receptor. This homology defines a new supergene family of cellular adhesion proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The p150,95 cell surface protein is a member of a family of heterodimeric leukocyte adhesion proteins that have homologous alpha subunits, each noncovalently associated with a common beta subunit. In this report we have metabolically labeled the U937 cell line at various timepoints during its phorbol myristic acetate-induced maturation to examine the kinetics of synthesis of these proteins during monocytic differentiation, and their maturation and glycosylation. The p150,95 alpha subunit was immunoprecipitated with p150,95-specific monoclonal antibody (MAb), or an antiserum to the denatured, purified alpha X subunit. The glycosylation and polypeptide chain length of the p150,95, Mac-1, and lymphocyte function associated antigen (LFA-1) alpha and beta subunits were compared by immunoprecipitation with subunit specific MAb and antisera, and by digestion with Endo H and N-glycanase. The p150,95 alpha subunit is synthesized as a precursor of 146,000 Mr, has five to six N-linked oligosaccharides, and has a polypeptide chain backbone of 132,000 Mr. Over 50% of the carbohydrate on the mature alpha subunit of 150,000 Mr was sensitive to Endo H digestion. The p150,95 alpha and beta precursors can associate before maturation into the mature form. Conversion to the mature form was accompanied by loss of reactivity with the antiserum to the denatured alpha X subunit, suggesting a change in conformation. Mac-1 and LFA-1 alpha subunits have precursors of 160,000 Mr and 165,000 Mr, respectively, and contain N-linked carbohydrates. The polypeptide chain length for the Mac-1 alpha subunit is 137,000 Mr, and for LFA-1 is 149,000 Mr. Only 14% of the oligosaccharide on the mature LFA-1 alpha subunit was sensitive to Endo H, suggesting that unlike p150,95, most is converted to the complex type. The differences noted in the Mr of the three homologous alpha subunits are therefore due to differences in both polypeptide chain length and carbohydrate processing during biosynthesis.  相似文献   

10.
Adhesion of lymphocytes to vascular endothelium is the first event in the passage of lymphocytes into a chronic inflammatory reaction. To investigate molecular mechanisms of T-EC adhesion, monoclonal antibodies (Mab) against T cell surface antigens have been tested for inhibition of binding. Baseline and phorbol ester-stimulated adhesion were strongly inhibited by either Mab 60.3 (reactive with the beta-chain of the LFA-1, OKM1, and p150,95 molecules) or by Mab TS 1/22 (specific for the alpha-chain of LFA-1). Although the increased binding of phorbol ester-stimulated lymphocytes was inhibited by anti-LFA-1 antibody, there was no increased expression of LFA-1 on phorbol ester-stimulated T cells, as determined by FACS analysis. Maximal inhibition of unstimulated and phorbol ester-stimulated T-EC adhesion was seen at Mab concentrations of 1 microgram/ml. In contrast, LPS- and IL 1-enhanced T-EC adhesion were only weakly inhibited by these antibodies. Mab 60.3 and TS 1/22 did not stain either unstimulated EC or LPS- or IL 1-stimulated EC, as measured by FACS analysis; moreover, preincubation of EC alone with these antibodies did not lead to inhibition of T-EC binding. Adhesion was not affected by Mab against the sheep erythrocyte receptor (LFA-2), a nonpolymorphic HLA class 1 framework antigen, or against LFA-3, the alpha-chain of OKM1, or the alpha-chain of p150,95. These results suggest that the mechanism of binding of lymphocytes to unstimulated endothelium differs from that to stimulated endothelium. LFA-1 appears to be an important adhesion-related molecule for binding to unstimulated endothelium. However, the increased lymphocyte adhesion to IL 1- or LPS-stimulated EC observed in these experiments appears to be relatively independent of LFA-1. The increased adhesion to stimulated EC could be due either to an increase in the avidity or the density of the EC receptor molecules ordinarily involved in unstimulated T-EC binding or to the formation of alternative receptors on the stimulated EC that are not present on unstimulated cells.  相似文献   

11.
Human T lymphocyte adhesion to human endothelial cells is the initial event in T cell migration to areas of extravascular inflammation. The molecular basis for T cell-endothelial cell adhesion was investigated using two different cell-cell adhesion assays: a) a fluorescein cell-cell adhesion assay using nonadherent endothelial cells and fluorescein-labeled T lymphocytes, and b) a radionuclide cell-cell adhesion assay using adherent endothelial cells and 51Cr-labelled T cells. Both assay systems demonstrated comparable quantitative assessment of cell-cell adhesions. The assays were performed at 22 degrees C and adhesions were maximal at 30 min. The results of these adhesion assays confirmed previous reports that T cells adhere to endothelial cells. In addition, we have shown that T cells adhere only marginally to foreskin fibroblasts or bone marrow derived fibroblasts. T cell-endothelial cell adhesions were significantly stronger than either monocytes or B lymphoblastoid cells adhesion to endothelial cells. To demonstrate the molecular mechanisms involved in regulating T cell-endothelial cell adhesions, a panel of function-associated monoclonal antibodies (MAb) were tested for their ability to inhibit T cell adhesion. MAb reactive with the leukocyte surface glycoprotein LFA-1 significantly inhibited T cell-endothelial cell adhesions in both assay systems. In contrast, MAb directed at other surface antigens did not inhibit T cell adhesion. The involvement of the LFA-1 glycoprotein in T lymphocyte adhesion to endothelial cells suggest that the LFA-1 molecule may be important in the regulation of leukocyte interactions.  相似文献   

12.
The leukocyte function-associated molecule 1 (LFA-1, CD11a/CD18) is a membrane glycoprotein which functions in cell-cell adhesion by heterophilic interaction with intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1). LFA-1 consists of an alpha subunit (Mr = 180,000) and a beta subunit (Mr = 95,000). We report the molecular biology and protein sequence of the alpha subunit. Overlapping cDNAs containing 5,139 nucleotides were isolated using an oligonucleotide specified by tryptic peptide sequence. The mRNA of 5.5 kb is expressed in lymphoid and myeloid cells but not in a bladder carcinoma cell line. The protein has a 1,063-amino acid extracellular domain, a 29-amino acid transmembrane region, and a 53-amino acid cytoplasmic tail. The extracellular domain contains seven repeats. Repeats V-VII are in tandem and contain putative divalent cation binding sites. LFA-1 has significant homology to the members of the integrin superfamily, having 36% identity with the Mac-1 and p150,95 alpha subunits and 28% identity with other integrin alpha subunits. An insertion of approximately 200 amino acids is present in the NH2-terminal region of LFA-1. This "inserted/interactive" or I domain is also present in the p150,95 and Mac-1 alpha subunits but is absent from other integrin alpha subunits sequenced to date. The I domain has striking homology to three repeats in human von Willebrand factor, two repeats in chicken cartilage matrix protein, and a region of complement factor B. These structural features indicate a bipartite evolution from the integrin family and from an I domain family. These features may also correspond to relevant functional domains.  相似文献   

13.
Cytotoxicity of activated monocytes on endothelial cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Unstimulated human monocytes did not express appreciable levels of cytotoxicity on normal human umbilical vein endothelial cells (EC) in a 24-48 hr TdR release assay. On activation with IFN-gamma and LPS, monocytes had appreciable cytotoxicity on EC. Monocyte cytotoxicity on EC was not dependent on the presence of contaminating lymphoid cells. Recombinant TNF, IL-1, and IL-6 as well as monocyte supernatants did not exert a cytotoxic effect on EC. Moreover, anti-TNF, anti-IL-1, and anti-IL-6 antibodies, as well as scavengers of reactive oxygen intermediates, did not affect the cytotoxicity of activated monocytes on EC. Antibodies against the beta-chain (CD18) of leukocyte integrins inhibited the adhesion and cytotoxicity of activated monocytes on EC. Pretreatment of EC with IL-1 augmented the adhesion of monocytes on EC. Normal monocytes were not cytotoxic on IL-1-pretreated EC and IL-1 treatment did not increase the susceptibility of EC to activated monocytes. Thus adhesion is necessary but not sufficient for monocyte killing of EC. Anti-alpha L (LFA-1) antibodies markedly reduced monocyte cytotoxicity on EC, although anti-alpha X (p150) antibodies had only a modest effect. Anti-alpha M (Mac-1/CR3) antibodies were intermediate inhibitors of EC killing by activated monocytes. Thus, alpha L, beta 2 (LFA-1), and, to a lesser extent, alpha M, beta 2 (Mac-1/CR3) and alpha X, beta 2 (p 150, 95) integrins are the main adhesive structures involved in the cytotoxic interaction of activated monocytes with EC. Monocyte-mediated damage of EC could play a role as a mechanism of tissue injury under conditions of local or systemic activation of mononuclear phagocytes.  相似文献   

14.
Extravasation of leukocytes at the sites of ischemia-reperfusion is thought to exacerbate the tissue injury. It has been proposed that leukocyte accumulation is a secondary effect of the ischemic damage, mediated by inflammatory cytokines. We have recently demonstrated that physiologically low levels of oxygen tension alone can have a direct effect on the adhesive characteristics of mesenchymal cells for lymphocytes. We now report that decrease of oxygen tension in the environment induces the adhesion of neutrophils to human endothelial cells in culture. Adhesion of human neutrophils to human umbilical vein, bovine aortic, and mouse microvascular endothelial cell monolayers, which had been incubated at pO2 of 50 torr for 3 hours, increased 2.5-fold, 2-, and 1.5-fold, respectively. The effects of decreased oxygen concentration on adhesion were not mediated by a soluble factor elaborated by the hypoxic cells. Low oxygen tension upregulates a saturable, endothelial cell-associated adhesion mechanism, capable of withstanding centrifugation forces greater than 160g. Hypoxia-induced adhesion was inhibited by LFA-1-specific (CD 11 a/CD18 integrin) antibodies, but not by antibodies directed against the ICAM-1 ligand for the LFA-1 receptor. These studies demonstrate that decreases in oxygen tension alone increase the adhesive properties of endothelial cells for leukocytes. In addition, they provide evidence for the existence of a new ligand for the LFA-1 molecule on edothelial cells which can be affected by hypoxic environments.  相似文献   

15.
Structural and functional features of a novel disorder characterized by recurrent bacterial infections are reviewed. This disease is associated with a number of phagocyte adhesion defects. In 10 patients, phenotypic analysis with monoclonal antibodies (MAb) revealed the same basic defect in all patients: deficiency of at least two leukocyte surface glycoproteins, Mo1 and LFA-1. These two antigens have distinct alpha subunits (Mo1 alpha = 155 kilodaltons, LFA-1 alpha = 177 kilodaltons) noncovalently linked to a common beta subunit (94 kilodaltons). Mo1 is closely associated with or identical to a receptor for the iC3b fragment of the third component of complement. LFA-1 is involved in lymphocyte proliferation, cytotoxicity, and natural killing. MAb directed to this family of glycoproteins induce functional defects in normal cells similar to those observed in deficient cells. In normal cells, the surface expression of these glycoproteins is regulated by the state of cell activation. Mitogens and alloantigens significantly increase the surface expression of LFA-1 on T lymphocytes. Stimuli that induce degranulation in neutrophils increase the surface expression of Mo1. In all patients with combined Mo1, LFA-1 deficiency, the predominant clinical manifestations were more characteristic of a phagocyte than a lymphocyte disorder. In vitro studies, however, reveal significant defects in phytohemagglutinin-induced proliferation that are more apparent at lower concentrations of the lectin. In some families, more than one sibling is affected. Intermediate levels of Mo1 were observed on granulocytes from both parents of one child. In one family, however, only the mother had significantly reduced levels of Mo1, which indicates heterogeneity in the inheritance of this disorder.  相似文献   

16.
Granulocytes from patients genetically deficient in the leukocyte glycoprotein family, Mo1, LFA-1, and Leu-M5 (P150,94), have defective complement receptor type III (CR3) activity as well as abnormal adhesion-dependent functions such as spreading, chemotaxis, and phagocytosis. To determine the contribution of the Mo1 heterodimer deficiency to the various functional aberrations observed in deficient granulocytes, we mapped the functional domains of Mo1 using several monoclonal antibodies to this molecule. In addition to iC3b binding, two granulocyte adhesion functions were examined: Cell spreading on plastic coverslips and chemotaxis. One monoclonal antibody to Mo1, 44, inhibits all three functions. Other monoclonal antibodies (903, Leu-15, and OKM10) inhibit iC3b binding to granulocytes but have no effect on cell spreading and/or chemotaxis. Another antibody, 904, has no significant inhibition of iC3b binding but inhibits spreading on plastic and chemotaxis. These studies suggest the presence of two functional domains in Mo1: one involved in iC3b binding and the other in enhancing certain granulocyte adhesion-dependent functions.  相似文献   

17.
The role of the Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 leukocyte glycoprotein family in mediating antiviral host defense was investigated by utilizing mononuclear cells (MC) obtained from eight patients with a genetic deficiency of Mac-1, LFA-1, and p150,95, and normal MC incubated with subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAb) directed against these glycoproteins. As shown with an in vitro chromium-release cytotoxicity assay to herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected Chang liver target cells, MC of these patients with the severe phenotype or normal MC preincubated with a combination of MAb against Mac-1 glycoprotein subunits were deficient in antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). When used individually, MAb directed at LFA-1-alpha or -beta also inhibited ADCC and natural killer cytotoxicity (NKC). In a single cell agarose assay, MC of Mac-1-deficient patients formed fewer effector-target cell conjugates in the presence of specific anti-HSV antibody. To investigate the in vitro contributions of these glycoproteins to cytotoxic host defense mechanisms, two in vivo adoptive transfer models were explored in which neonatal mice are protected against a lethal HSV challenge by normal human MC plus anti-HSV antibody (in vivo ADCC) or human interferon-alpha (NKC stimulated in vivo). In each model, MC from patients with "severe" or "moderate" phenotypes of Mac-1 deficiency, or normal MC incubated with a combination of anti-LFA-alpha, Mac-1-alpha, p150,95-alpha plus -beta MAb failed to protect neonatal mice against lethal HSV infection. These studies further indicate requirements for adhesion-dependent mechanisms in the mediation of MC-ADCC, and suggest that Mac-1-dependent cellular adhesive properties are necessary for normal cytotoxic functions in vivo in experimental models of human ADCC or interferon-stimulated NKC. These findings, in addition to the recognized occurrence of severe or even lethal viral infections in some Mac-1-deficient patients, suggest that glycoproteins of the Mac-1 family may be important determinants of antiviral host defense.  相似文献   

18.
The leukocyte adhesion receptors, p150,95, Mac-1 and LFA-1 are integral membrane glycoproteins which contain distinct alpha subunits of 180,000-150,000 Mr associated with identical beta subunits of 95,000 Mr in alpha beta complexes. p150,95 alpha subunit tryptic peptides were used to specify oligonucleotide probes and a cDNA clone of 4.7 kb containing the entire coding sequence was isolated from a size-selected myeloid cell cDNA library. The 4.7-kb cDNA clone encodes a signal sequence, an extracellular domain of 1081 amino acids containing 10 potential glycosylation sites, a transmembrane domain of 26 amino acids, and a C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of 29 residues. The extracellular domain contains three tandem homologous repeats of approximately 60 amino acids with putative divalent cation-binding sites, and four weaker repeats which lack such binding sites. The cDNA clone hybridizes with a mRNA of 4.7 kb which is induced during in vitro differentiation of myeloid cell lines. The p150,95 alpha subunit is homologous to the alpha subunits of receptors which recognize the RGD sequence in extracellular matrix components, as has previously been shown for the beta subunits, supporting the concept that receptors involved in both cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions belong to a single gene superfamily termed the integrins. Distinctive features of the p150,95 alpha subunit include an insertion of 126 residues N-terminal to the putative metal binding region and a deletion of the region in which the matrix receptors are proteolytically cleaved during processing.  相似文献   

19.
Monocytes play a critical role in defending the host against foreign organisms and in regulating the behavior of other cells. Monocytes circulate as nonadherent cells in the blood and migrate as adherent cells through tissues. Adhesion molecules mediate not only cell adhesion, but also migration, phagocytosis, and many other adhesion-dependent functions. Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) is thought to be responsible for monocyte recruitment in acute inflammatory conditions and may be an important mediator in chronic inflammation. In this study, immunofluorescence flow cytometry was used to determine whether MCP-1 can regulate the cell surface expression of adhesion molecules, particularly beta-2 and alpha-4 integrins and the leukocyte adhesion molecule-1. We found that MCP-1 induced expression of CD11c (p150,95 alpha-subunit) and CD11b (Mac-1 alpha-subunit), and caused little or no change of CD11a (lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1 alpha-subunit), very late activation Ag-4, or leukocyte adhesion molecule-1. We demonstrated that antibodies to beta-2 and alpha-4 integrins inhibited MCP-1-induced monocyte chemotaxis. We also showed that MCP-1 is capable of inducing IL-1 and IL-6, but not TNF production of monocytes. These results indicate that MCP-1 is not only a chemoattractant but also a novel cytokine with the capacity to regulate several parameters of monocyte function.  相似文献   

20.
We show that CC chemokines induced a sustained increase in monocyte adhesion to intercellular adhesion molecule-1 that was mediated by Mac-1 (alphaMbeta2) but not lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1; alphaLbeta2). In contrast, staining for an activation epitope revealed a rapid and transient up-regulation of LFA-1 activity by monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) in monocytes and Jurkat CCR2 chemokine receptor transfectants or by stromal-derived factor-1alpha in Jurkat cells. Differential kinetics for activation of Mac-1 (sustained) and LFA-1 (transient) avidity in response to stromal-derived factor-1alpha were confirmed by expression of alphaM or alphaL in alphaL-deficient Jurkat cells. Moreover, expression of chimeras containing alphaL and alphaM cytoplasmic domain exchanges indicated that alpha cytoplasmic tails conferred the specific mode of regulation. Coexpressing alphaM or chimeras in mutant Jurkat cells with a "gain of function" phenotype that results in constitutively active LFA-1 demonstrated that Mac-1 was not constitutively active, whereas constitutive activity was mediated via the alphaL cytoplasmic tail, implying the presence of distinct signaling pathways for LFA-1 and Mac-1. Transendothelial chemotaxis of monocytes in response to MCP-1 was dependent on LFA-1; however, Mac-1 was involved at MCP-1 concentrations stimulating its avidity, showing differential contributions of beta2 integrins. Our data suggest that a specific regulation of beta2 integrin avidity by chemokines may be important in leukocyte extravasation and may be triggered by distinct activation pathways transduced via the alpha subunit cytoplasmic domains.  相似文献   

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