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1.
During an inflammatory response induced by infection or injury, leukocytes traverse the endothelial barrier into the tissue space. Extravasation of leukocytes is a multistep process involving rolling, tethering, firm adhesion to the endothelium, and finally, transendothelial migration, the least characterized step in the process. The resting endothelium is normally impermeable to leukocytes; thus, during inflammation, intracellular signals that modulate endothelial permeability are activated to facilitate the paracellular passage of leukocytes. Using a static in vitro assay of neutrophil transmigration across human umbilical vein endothelium, a panel of inhibitors of intracellular signaling was screened for their ability to inhibit transmigration. PD98059, a specific inhibitor of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2 activation, inhibited both transmigration across TNF-alpha-activated endothelium and transmigration induced by the chemoattractant fMLP in a dose-dependent manner. PD98059 did not inhibit neutrophil chemotaxis in the absence of an endothelial barrier nor neutrophil adhesion to the endothelium, suggesting that its effect was on the endothelium, and furthermore, that endothelial ERK activation may be important for transmigration. We demonstrate in this study that endothelial ERK is indeed activated during neutrophil transmigration and that its activation is dependent on the addition of neutrophils to the endothelium. Further characterization showed that the trigger for endothelial ERK activation is a soluble protein of molecular mass approximately 30 kDa released from neutrophils after activation.  相似文献   

2.
Leukocyte infiltration in atherosclerosis has been extensively investigated by using histological techniques on fixed tissues. In this study, intravital microscopic observations of leukocyte recruitment in the aorta of atherosclerotic mice were performed. Interactions between leukocytes and atherosclerotic endothelium were highly transient, thereby limiting the ability for rolling leukocytes to firmly adhere. Leukocyte rolling was abolished by function inhibition of P-selectin (P<0.001, n=8), whereas antibody blockage of E-selectin (n=10) decreased rolling leukocyte flux to 51 +/- 9.9% (mean+/-SE, P<0.01) and increased leukocyte rolling velocity to 162 +/- 18% (P<0.01) of pretreatment values. Notably, function inhibition of the integrin alpha(4) subunit (n=5) had no effect on rolling flux (107+/-25%, P=0.782) or rolling velocity (89+/-6.1%, P=0.147), despite endothelial expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1). Leukocytes interacting with atherosclerotic endothelium were predominantly neutrophils, because treatment with antineutrophil serum decreased rolling and neutrophil counts in peripheral blood to the same extent. In conclusion, we present the first direct observations of atherosclerosis in vivo. We show that transient dynamics of leukocyte-endothelium interactions are important regulators of arterial leukocyte recruitment and that leukocyte rolling in atherosclerosis is critically dependent on the endothelial selectins. This experimental technique and the data presented introduce a novel perspective for the study of pathophysiological events involved in large-vessel disease.  相似文献   

3.
4.
There are several potential mechanisms by which HDLs protect against atherosclerosis. One relates to the ability of HDLs to promote the efflux of cholesterol from macrophages. Another is the ability of HDLs to inhibit one of the earliest events in the development of atherosclerosis, namely the expression of vascular cell adhesion molecules in activated endothelial cells. This property has been reported in vitro in studies with both native and reconstituted HDLs. The inhibitory activity of reconstituted HDLs is influenced by the phospholipid composition of the particles. An inhibition of endothelial cell adhesion molecule expression has also been observed in some (but not all) studies conducted in vivo in mice and pigs. The mechanism of this potentially anti-atherogenic effect of HDLs remains uncertain, as does its contribution to the cardioprotective effects of HDLs in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
A number of natural and recombinant human cytokines have been tested for their ability to activate basophil and neutrophil adhesiveness for human umbilical vein endothelial cells in vitro. Coincubation of basophils and endothelial cell monolayers for 10 min with biologically relevant concentrations of rIL-1, natural IL-2, rIL-4, rIL-5, rIL-6, rIL-8, rGM-CSF, and rIFN-gamma had no effect on basophil adhesiveness. In contrast, rIL-3 induced basophil adhesiveness for endothelial cells (optimal at 1 ng/ml: 144 +/- 18% of control adherence (mean +/- SEM); control basophil binding, 13 +/- 3%, n = 9, p less than or equal to 0.05). This increase in adhesiveness was similar in magnitude to that induced by an optimal concentration of a known potent inducer of basophil adhesiveness (1 microM FMLP, 164 +/- 15% of control adherence, n = 9). Under these experimental conditions, the effects of rIL-3 occurred at concentrations of 0.1 to 30 ng/ml, were partially dependent on calcium, and were not accompanied by histamine release. Fixation experiments demonstrated that the effect of rIL-3 was directed against the basophil rather than the endothelial cell. Neither rIL-3 nor the other cytokines tested had any effect on the adherence of 51Cr-labeled neutrophils, even when tested simultaneously on cells from the same donors. Under experimental conditions that permitted histamine release, no correlation was seen between the ability of rIL-3 (0.3 to 300 ng/ml) to induce histamine release or enhance adhesiveness (n = 8). mAb blocking experiments demonstrated a role for both CD11 and CD18 adherence glycoproteins in basophil adherence induced by rIL-3, and indirect immunofluorescence and flow cytometric analysis revealed that rIL-3 treatment led to rapid and sustained increases in cell surface expression of CD11b antigens on basophils but not neutrophils (e.g., after 10 min: 217 +/- 29 vs 91 +/- 11% of control mean fluorescence intensity, p less than 0.05). However, no correlation was seen between the magnitude of changes in CD11b expression and changes in adhesion when tested simultaneously. These results suggest that local production of IL-3 during allergic reactions in vivo may selectively promote basophil activation, adhesion to endothelium, and recruitment to extravascular sites of inflammation.  相似文献   

6.
Leukocyte transendothelial migration (TEM) has been modeled as a multistep process beginning with rolling adhesion, followed by firm adhesion, and ending with either transcellular or paracellular passage of the leukocyte across the endothelial monolayer. In the case of paracellular TEM, endothelial cell (EC) junctions are transiently disassembled to allow passage of leukocytes. Numerous lines of evidence demonstrate that tyrosine phosphorylation of adherens junction proteins, such as vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin) and beta-catenin, correlates with the disassembly of junctions. However, the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in the regulation of junctions during leukocyte TEM is not completely understood. Using human leukocytes and EC, we show that ICAM-1 engagement leads to activation of two tyrosine kinases, Src and Pyk2. Using phospho-specific Abs, we show that engagement of ICAM-1 induces phosphorylation of VE-cadherin on tyrosines 658 and 731, which correspond to the p120-catenin and beta-catenin binding sites, respectively. These phosphorylation events require the activity of both Src and Pyk2. We find that inhibition of endothelial Src with PP2 or SU6656 blocks neutrophil transmigration (71.1 +/- 3.8% and 48.6 +/- 3.8% reduction, respectively), whereas inhibition of endothelial Pyk2 also results in decreased neutrophil transmigration (25.5 +/- 6.0% reduction). Moreover, overexpression of the nonphosphorylatable Y658F or Y731F mutants of VE-cadherin impairs transmigration of neutrophils compared with overexpression of wild-type VE-cadherin (32.7 +/- 7.1% and 38.8 +/- 6.5% reduction, respectively). Our results demonstrate that engagement of ICAM-1 by leukocytes results in tyrosine phosphorylation of VE-cadherin, which is required for efficient neutrophil TEM.  相似文献   

7.
During acute inflammation, neutrophil recruitment into extravascular tissue requires neutrophil tethering and rolling on cytokine-activated endothelial cells (ECs), tight adhesion, crawling towards EC junctions and transendothelial migration (TEM). Following TEM, neutrophils must still traverse the subendothelial basement membrane and network of pericytes (PCs). Until recently, the contribution of the PC layer to neutrophil recruitment was largely ignored. Here we analyze human neutrophil interactions with interleukin (IL)-1β-activated human EC monolayers, PC monolayers and EC/PC bilayers in vitro. Compared to EC, PC support much lower levels of neutrophil binding (54.6% vs. 7.1%, respectively) and transmigration (63.7 vs. 8.8%, respectively) despite comparable levels of IL-8 (CXCL8) synthesis and display. Remarkably, EC/PC bilayers support intermediate levels of transmigration (37.7%). Neutrophil adhesion to both cell types is Mac-1-dependent and while ICAM-1 transduction of PCs increases neutrophil adhesion to (41.4%), it does not increase transmigration through PC monolayers. TEM, which increases neutrophil Mac-1 surface expression, concomitantly increases the ability of neutrophils to traverse PCs (19.2%). These data indicate that contributions from both PCs and ECs must be considered in evaluation of microvasculature function in acute inflammation.  相似文献   

8.
Transmigration of neutrophils across the endothelium occurs at the cell-cell junctions where the vascular endothelium cadherin (VE cadherin) is expressed. This adhesive receptor was previously demonstrated to be involved in the maintenance of endothelium integrity. We propose that neutrophil transmigration across the vascular endothelium goes in parallel with cleavage of VE cadherin by elastase and cathepsin G present on the surface of neutrophils. This hypothesis is supported by the following lines of evidence. 1) Proteolytic fragments of VE cadherin are released into the culture medium upon adhesion of neutrophils to endothelial cell monolayers; 2) conditioned culture medium, obtained after neutrophil adhesion to endothelial monolayers, cleaves the recombinantly expressed VE cadherin extracellular domain; 3) these cleavages are inhibited by inhibitors of elastase; 4) VE cadherin fragments produced by conditioned culture medium or by exogenously added elastase are identical as shown by N-terminal sequencing and mass spectrometry analysis; 5) both elastase- and cathepsin G-specific VE cadherin cleavage patterns are produced upon incubation with tumor necrosis factor alpha-stimulated and fixed neutrophils; 6) transendothelial permeability increases in vitro upon addition of either elastase or cathepsin G; and 7) neutrophil transmigration is reduced in vitro in the presence of elastase and cathepsin G inhibitors. Our results suggest that cleavage of VE cadherin by neutrophil surface-bound proteases induces formation of gaps through which neutrophils transmigrate.  相似文献   

9.
The third member of the family of junctional adhesion molecules (JAMs), JAM-3, also called JAM-C, was recently shown to be a novel counter-receptor on platelets for the leukocyte beta(2)-integrin Mac-1 (alphaMbeta(2), CD11b/CD18). Here, new functional aspects of the role of endothelial cell JAM-C were investigated. Endothelial cells express JAM-C, which is predominantly localized within junctions at interendothelial contacts, since it codistributes with a tight junction component, zonula occludens-1. Whereas JAM-C does not participate in neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells, it mediates neutrophil transmigration in a Mac-1-dependent manner. In particular, inhibition of JAM-C significantly reduced neutrophil transendothelial migration, and the combination of JAM-C and platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 blockade almost completely abolished neutrophil transendothelial migration in vitro. In vivo, inhibition of JAM-C with soluble mouse JAM-C resulted in a 50% reduction of neutrophil emigration in the mouse model of acute thioglycollate-induced peritonitis. Thus, JAM-C participates in neutrophil transmigration and thereby provides a novel molecular target for antagonizing interactions between vascular cells that promote inflammatory vascular pathologies.  相似文献   

10.
Platelets are increasingly recognized as important for inflammation in addition to thrombosis. Platelets promote the adhesion of neutrophils [polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs)] to the endothelium; P-selectin and P-selectin glycoprotein ligand (PSGL)-1 have been suggested to participate in these interactions. Whether platelets also promote PMN transmigration across the endothelium is less clear. We tested the hypothesis that platelets enhance PMN transmigration across the inflamed endothelium and that PSGL-1 is involved. We studied the effects of platelets on PMN transmigration in vivo and in vitro using a well-characterized corneal injury model in C57BL/6 mice and IL-1β-stimulated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) under static and dynamic conditions. In vivo, platelet depletion altered PMN emigration from limbal microvessels after injury, with decreased emigration 6 and 12 h after injury. Both PSGL-1-/- and P-selectin-/- mice, but not Mac-1-/- mice, also had reduced PMN emigration at 12 h after injury relative to wild-type control mice. In the in vitro HUVEC model, platelets enhanced PMN transendothelial migration under static and dynamic conditions independent of firm adhesion. Anti-PSGL-1 antibodies markedly inhibited platelet-PMN aggregates, as assessed by flow cytometry, and attenuated the effect of platelets on PMN transmigration under static conditions without affecting firm adhesion. These data support the notion that platelets enhance neutrophil transmigration across the inflamed endothelium both in vivo and in vitro, via a PSGL-1-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
The vascular endothelial cell cadherin complex (VE-cadherin, alpha-, beta-, and gamma-catenin, and p120/p100) localizes to adherens junctions surrounding vascular endothelial cells and may play a critical role in the transendothelial migration of circulating blood leukocytes. Previously, we have reported that neutrophil adhesion to human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayers, under static conditions, results in a dramatic loss of the VE-cadherin complex. Subsequent studies by us and others (Moll, T., E. Dejana, and D. Vestweber. 1998. J. Cell Biol. 140:403-407) suggested that this phenomenon might reflect degradation by neutrophil proteases released during specimen preparation. We postulated that some form of disruption of the VE-cadherin complex might, nonetheless, be a physiological process during leukocyte transmigration. In the present study, the findings demonstrate a specific, localized effect of migrating leukocytes on the VE-cadherin complex in cytokine-activated HUVEC monolayers. Monocytes and in vitro differentiated U937 cells induce focal loss in the staining of VE-cadherin, alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin during transendothelial migration under physiological flow conditions. These events are inhibited by antibodies that prevent transendothelial migration and are reversed following transmigration. Together, these data suggest that an endothelial-dependent step of transient and focal disruption of the VE-cadherin complex occurs during leukocyte transmigration.  相似文献   

12.
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) infiltration into tissues is frequently accompanied by increase in vascular permeability. This suggests that PMN adhesion and transmigration could trigger modifications in the architecture of endothelial cell-to-cell junctions. In the present paper, using indirect immunofluorescence, we found that PMN adhesion to tumor necrosis factor-activated endothelial cells (EC) induced the disappearance from endothelial cell-to-cell contacts of adherens junction (AJ) components: vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin, alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin. Immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis of the VE- cadherin/catenin complex showed that the amount of beta-catenin and plakoglobin was markedly reduced from the complex and from total cell extracts. In contrast, VE-cadherin and alpha-catenin were only partially affected. Disorganization of endothelial AJ by PMN was not accompanied by EC retraction or injury and was specific for VE- cadherin/catenin complex, since platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1 (PECAM-1) distribution at cellular contacts was unchanged. PMN adhesion to EC seems to be a prerequisite for VE-cadherin/catenin complex disorganization. This phenomenon could be fully inhibited by blocking PMN adhesion with an anti-integrin beta 2 mAb, while it could be reproduced by any condition that induced increase of PMN adhesion, such as addition of PMA or an anti-beta 2-activating mAb. The effect on endothelial AJ was specific for PMN since adherent activated lymphocytes did not induce similar changes. High concentrations of protease inhibitors and oxygen metabolite scavengers were unable to prevent AJ disorganization mediated by PMN. PMN adhesion to EC was accompanied by increase in EC permeability in vitro. This effect was dependent on PMN adhesion, was not mediated by proteases and oxygen- reactive metabolites, and could be reproduced by EC treatment with EGTA. Finally, immunohistochemical analysis showed that VE-cadherin distribution was affected by PMN adhesion to the vessel wall in vivo too. This work suggests that PMN adhesion could trigger intracellular signals in EC that possibly regulate VE-cadherin /catenin complex disorganization. This effect could increase EC permeability and facilitate PMN transmigration during the acute inflammatory reaction.  相似文献   

13.
Endothelial cells in vivo are well known to respond to parallel shear stress induced by luminal blood flow. In addition, fluid filtration across endothelium (transendothelial flow) may trigger nitric oxide (NO) production, presumably via shear stress within intercellular clefts. Since NO regulates neutrophil-endothelial interactions, we determined whether transendothelial flow regulates neutrophil transmigration. Interleukin-1beta-treated human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayers cultured on a polycarbonate filter were placed in a custom chamber with or without a modest hydrostatic pressure gradient (DeltaP, 10 cm H(2)O) to induce transendothelial flow. In other experiments, cells were studied in a parallel plate flow chamber at various transendothelial flows (DeltaP = 0, 5, and 10 cm H(2)O) and luminal flows (shear stress of 0, 1, and 2 dyn/cm(2)). In the absence of luminal flow, transendothelial flow reduced transmigration of freshly isolated human neutrophils from 57% to 14% (P < 0.05) and induced an increase in NO detected with a fluorescent assay (DAF-2DA). The NO synthase inhibitor L-NAME prevented the effects of transendothelial flow on neutrophil transmigration, while a NO donor (DETA/NO, 1 mM) inhibited neutrophil transmigration. Finally, in the presence of luminal flow (1 and 2 dyn/cm(2)), transendothelial flow also inhibited transmigration. On the basis of HUVEC morphometry and measured transendothelial volume flow, we estimated cleft shear stress to range from 49 to 198 dyn/cm(2). These shear stress estimates, while substantial, are of similar magnitude to those reported by others with similar analyses. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that endothelial cleft shear stress inhibits neutrophil transmigration via a NO-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
Lymphocyte recruitment to sites of inflammation involves a bidirectional series of cues between the endothelial cell (EC) and the leukocyte that culminate in lymphocyte migration into the tissue. Remodeling of the EC F-actin cytoskeleton has been observed after leukocyte adhesion, but the signals to the EC remain poorly defined. We studied the dependence of peripheral blood lymphocyte transendothelial migration (TEM) through an EC monolayer in vitro on EC phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) activity. Lymphocytes were perfused over cytokine-activated EC using a parallel-plate laminar flow chamber. Inhibition of EC PI 3-kinase activity using LY-294002 or wortmannin decreased lymphocyte TEM (48 +/- 6 or 34 +/- 7%, respectively, vs. control; mean +/- SE; P < 0.05). Similarly, EC knockdown of the p85alpha regulatory subunit of PI 3-kinase decreased lymphocyte transmigration. Treatment of EC with jasplakinolide to inhibit EC F-actin remodeling also decreased lymphocyte TEM to 24 +/- 10% vs. control (P < 0.05). EC PI 3-kinase inhibition did not change the strength of lymphocyte adhesion to the EC or formation of the EC "docking structure" after intercellular adhesion molecule-1 ligation, whereas this was inhibited by jasplakinolide treatment. A similar fraction of lymphocytes migrated on control or LY-294002-treated EC and localized to interendothelial junctions. However, lymphocytes failed to extend processes below the level of vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin on LY-294002-treated EC. Together these observations indicate that EC PI 3-kinase activity and F-actin remodeling are required during lymphocyte diapedesis and identify a PI 3-kinase-dependent step following initial separation of the VE-cadherin barrier.  相似文献   

15.
We assessed pulmonary endothelial and epithelial permeability and lung lymph flow in nine adult sheep under base-line conditions and after resuscitation from profound hemorrhagic shock. Animals were mechanically ventilated and maintained on 1% halothane anesthesia while aortic pressure was held at 40 Torr for 3 h. Systemic heparin was not used. After reinfusion of shed blood, sheep recovered from anesthesia and we measured lung lymph flow (QL), lymph-to-plasma concentration ratio for proteins, and time taken to reach half-equilibrium concentration of intravenous tracer albumin in lymph (t1/2). Twenty-four hours after bolus injection of radio-albumin we lavaged subsegments of the right upper lobe and determined fractional equilibration of the tracer in the alveolar luminal-lining layer. In each sheep we had measured these parameters 7 days earlier under base-line conditions. Animals were killed, and the lungs were used for gravimetric determination of extravascular lung water (gravimetric extravascular lung water-to-dry weight ratio) 24 h after resuscitation from shock. Pulmonary endothelial injury after resuscitation was evidenced by marked increase in QL, without fall in lymph-to-plasma ratio. Time taken to reach half-equilibrium concentration fell from 169 +/- 47 (SD) min in base-line studies to 53 +/- 33 min after shock. There was no evidence of lung epithelial injury. Gravimetric extravascular lung water-to-dry weight ratio was significantly increased in these animals killed 24 h after resuscitation (4.94 +/- 0.29) compared with values in our laboratory controls (4.13 +/- 0.09, mean +/- SD). These data demonstrate a loss of lung endothelial integrity in sheep after resuscitation from profound hemorrhagic shock.  相似文献   

16.
IL-1 beta promotes adhesiveness in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HuVEC) for eosinophils through expression of adhesion molecules including intercellular adhesion molecules-1 (ICAM-1), E-selectin, and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1). Using an in vitro endothelial monolayer system, we examined whether IL-1 beta or TNF-alpha can promote eosinophil transendothelial migration. We also evaluated the contributions of ICAM-1, E-selectin, VCAM-1, leukocyte adhesion complex (CD11/18), and very late Ag-4 (CD11b/18) (VLA-4) in this process using blocking mAb, and determined the changes in expression of CD11b and L-selectin on eosinophils that had undergone transmigration. IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha treatment of HuVEC (4 h, 5 ng/ml) induced significant transendothelial migration of eosinophils (a 4.1 +/- 0.4-fold (IL-1 beta) and 2.0 +/- 0.9-fold (TNF-alpha) increase from the spontaneous value of 3.2 +/- 0.3%). Increased CD11b expression and shedding of L-selectin were observed on eosinophils following IL-1 beta-induced eosinophil transendothelial migration. Studies with mAb revealed that blockade of either ICAM-1 or CD11/18 inhibited transmigration, while antibodies against VCAM-1 and VLA-4 had no inhibitory effect. Among antibodies which block beta 2 integrins, anti-CD18 mAb had the best inhibitory effect (88% inhibition). The combined inhibitory effect of anti-CD11a mAb and anti-CD11b mAb was roughly equal to that of anti-CD18, although anti-CD11a (31% inhibition) and anti-CD11b (52% inhibition) were less effective individually. Anti-ICAM-1 by itself inhibited IL-1 beta-induced eosinophil transendothelial migration (24% inhibition) whereas neither anti-E-selectin nor anti-VCAM-1 were effective inhibitors. Interestingly, the combination of anti-E-selectin and anti-VCAM-1 with anti-ICAM-1 inhibited IL-1 beta-induced eosinophil transendothelial migration significantly better (53% inhibition) than anti-ICAM-1 alone. These results suggest that although the initial attachment of eosinophils to IL-1 beta-activated endothelial cells involves VCAM-1, E-selectin, and ICAM-1, the subsequent transendothelial migration process relies heavily on ICAM-1 and CD11/18. Finally, the changes that eosinophils have been observed to undergo during infiltration in vivo, namely increased expression of CD11/18 and shedding of L-selectin, appear to take place as a direct result of the interaction between eosinophils and endothelial cells.  相似文献   

17.
Elevated levels of oxLDL in the bloodstream and increased vasculature stiffness are both associated with cardiovascular disease in patients. However, it is not known how oxLDL and subendothelial matrix stiffness together regulate an immune response. Here, we used an in vitro model of the vascular endothelium to explore the combined effects of oxLDL and subendothelial matrix stiffening on neutrophil transmigration. We prepared fibronectin-coated polyacrylamide gels of varying stiffness and plated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (ECs) onto the gels. We observed that oxLDL treatment of the endothelium promoted neutrophil transmigration (from <1% to 26% on soft 0.87kPa substrates), with stiffer substrates further promoting transmigration (54% on 5kPa and 41% on 280kPa). OxLDL exposure enhanced intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) expression on the endothelium, which was likely responsible for the oxLDL-induced transmigration. Importantly, inhibition of MLCK-mediated EC contraction reduced transmigration to ~9% on all substrates and eliminated the effects of subendothelial matrix stiffness. In addition, large holes, thousands of square microns in size, formed in monolayers on stiff substrates following transmigration, indicating that oxLDL treatment and subsequent neutrophil transmigration caused serious damage to the endothelium. Our results reveal that an interplay between ICAM-1 and MLCK-dependent contractile forces mediates neutrophil transmigration through oxLDL-treated endothelium. Thus, microvasculature stiffness, which likely varies depending on tissue location and health, is an important regulator of the transmigration step of the immune response in the presence of oxLDL.  相似文献   

18.
Human neutrophil-specific CD177 (NB1 and PRV-1) has been reported to be up-regulated in a number of inflammatory settings, including bacterial infection and granulocyte-colony-stimulating factor application. Little is known about its function. By flow cytometry and immunoprecipitation studies, we identified platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) as a binding partner of CD177. Real-time protein-protein analysis using surface plasmon resonance confirmed a cation-dependent, specific interaction between CD177 and the heterophilic domains of PECAM-1. Monoclonal antibodies against CD177 and against PECAM-1 domain 6 inhibited adhesion of U937 cells stably expressing CD177 to immobilized PECAM-1. Transendothelial migration of human neutrophils was also inhibited by these antibodies. Our findings provide direct evidence that neutrophil-specific CD177 is a heterophilic binding partner of PECAM-1. This interaction may constitute a new pathway that participates in neutrophil transmigration.  相似文献   

19.
Hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation cause endotoxemia and hepatocellular damage. Because lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP) enhances cellular responses to endotoxin, our aim was to determine whether LBP contributes to hemorrhage/resuscitation-induced injury by comparing LBP knockout and wild-type mice. Under pentobarbital anaesthesia, wild-type and LBP-deficient mice were hemorrhaged to 30 mmHg for 3 h and then resuscitated with shed blood plus half the volume of lactated Ringer solution. Serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) necrosis, neutrophil infiltration, and 4-hydroxynonenal by histology/cytochemistry and stress kinase activation by immunoblot analysis were then determined. ALT in wild-type mice was 2,461 +/- 383 and 1,418 +/- 194 IU/l (means +/- SE), respectively, at 2 and 6 h after resuscitation versus sham ALT of 102 +/- 6 IU/l. In LBP-deficient mice, ALT was blunted at both time points to 1,108 +/- 340 and 619 +/- 171 IU/l (P < 0.05). Liver necrosis after 6 h was also attenuated from 3.5 +/- 0.8% in wild-type mice to 1.3 +/- 0.5% in LBP-deficient mice (P < 0.05). After hemorrhage/resuscitation, neutrophil infiltration increased 71% more in wild-type than LBP knockout mice. Similarly, hepatic 4-hydroxynonenal staining, indicative of lipid peroxidation, decreased from 33.8 +/- 4.5% in wild-type mice to 11.6 +/- 1.9% in knockout mice (P < 0.05). After hemorrhage/resuscitation, activation of MAPKs, JNK and ERK, occurred in wild-type mice, which was largely blocked in LBP-deficient mice. However, endotoxin in portal blood after resuscitation was not significantly different between wild-type and knockout mice. In conclusion, hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation to mice cause severe, LBP-mediated hepatocellular damage. An absence of LBP blunts hepatocellular injury with decreased neutrophil infiltration, oxidative stress, and c-Jun and ERK activation.  相似文献   

20.
The role of L-selectin (LAM-1) as a regulator of leukocyte adhesion to kidney microvascular glomerular endothelial cells was assessed in vitro by using L-selectin-directed mAb and an L-selectin cDNA-transfected cell line. The initial attachment of neutrophils, monocytes, and lymphocytes to TNF-activated bovine glomerular endothelial cells was significantly inhibited by the anti-LAM1-3 mAb. Under static conditions, anti-LAM1-3 mAb inhibited neutrophil adhesion by 15 +/- 5%, whereas the anti-LAM1-10 mAb, directed against a functionally silent epitope of L-selectin, was without effect. The binding of a CD18 mAb inhibited adhesion by 47 +/- 6%. In contrast, when the assays were carried out under nonstatic conditions or at 4 degrees C, the anti-LAM1-3 mAb generated significantly greater inhibition (approximately 60%). CD18-dependent adhesion was minimal (approximately 10%) under these conditions. TNF-activated glomerular endothelial cells also supported adhesion of a mouse pre-B cell line transfected with L-selectin cDNA, but not wild-type cells. This process was also inhibited by the anti-LAM1-3 mAb. Leukocyte adhesion to unstimulated endothelial cells was independent of L-selectin, but, after TNF stimulation, L-selectin-mediated adhesion was observed at 4 h, with maximal induction persisting for 24 to 48 h. Leukocyte adhesion was not observed if glomerular endothelial cells were exposed to TNF in the presence of RNA or protein synthesis inhibitors. Leukocyte attachment to TNF-activated glomerular endothelial cells was also partially inhibited by treatment of the cells with mannose-6-phosphate or phosphomannan monoester, a soluble complex carbohydrate, or by prior treatment of glomerular endothelial cells with neuraminidase, suggesting that the glomerular endothelial cell ligand shares functional characteristics with those expressed by lymph node and large vessel endothelial cells. These data suggest that TNF activation induced the biosynthesis and surface expression of a ligand(s) for L-selectin on glomerular endothelial cells, which supports neutrophil, monocyte, and lymphocyte attachment under nonstatic conditions.  相似文献   

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