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1.
To resist substantial wall shear stress (WSS) exerted by flowing blood, metastatic melanoma cells can form adhesive contacts with subendothelial extracellular matrix proteins, such as fibronectin (FN). Such contacts may be stabilized by transglutaminase catalyzed-crosslinkage of cell focal adhesion proteins. We analyzed human melanoma cell adhesion under flow by decreasing the flow (WSS) of melanoma cell suspensions and allowing them to adhere to immobilized wheat germ agglutinin or FN. At the wall shear adhesion threshold (WSAT), cell adherence was rapid with no rolling. Following cell adherence, we increased the flow and determined the wall shear detachment threshold (WSDeT). Cells spread and remained adherent on immobilized FN at high WSDeTs (≥ 32.5 dynes/cm2). The high resistance of adherent cells to shear forces suggested that transglutaminase-mediated crosslinking might be involved. Transglutaminase inhibitors monodansylcadaverine and INO-3178 decreased WSAT, and at low concentrations completely inhibited tumor cell spreading and promoted detachment at low WSDeTs (0.67 dynes/cm2). In static adhesion assays, transglutaminase inhibitors decreased cell adhesion to immobilized-FN in a dose-dependent manner and prevented the formation of crosslinked125I-FN complex that failed to enter a SDS-polyacrylamide gradient gel. The data suggest that transglutaminase-catalyzed crosslinking, particularly in the presence of WSS, may be important in stabilizing cellular adhesive contacts during adhesion to immobilized-FN.  相似文献   

2.
Vaso-occlusive crisis, a common painful complication of sickle cell disease, is a complex process triggered by intercellular adhesive interactions among blood cells and the endothelium in all human organs (e.g., the oxygen-rich lung as well as hypoxic systems such as liver and kidneys). We present a combined experimental-computational study to quantify the adhesive characteristics of sickle mature erythrocytes (SMEs) and irreversibly sickled cells (ISCs) under flow conditions mimicking those in postcapillary venules. We employed an in vitro microfluidic cell adherence assay, which is coated uniformly with fibronectin. We investigated the adhesion dynamics of SMEs and ISCs in pulsatile flow under well-controlled hypoxic conditions, inferring the cell adhesion strength by increasing the flow rate (or wall shear stress (WSS)) until the onset of cell detachment. In parallel, we performed simulations of individual SMEs and ISCs under shear. We introduced two metrics to quantify the adhesion process, the cell aspect ratio (AR) as a function of WSS and its rate of change (the dynamic deformability index). We found that the AR of SMEs decreases significantly with the increase of WSS, consistent between the experiments and simulations. In contrast, the AR of ISCs remains constant in time and independent of the flow rate. The critical WSS value for detaching a single SME in oxygenated state is in the range of 3.9–5.5 Pa depending on the number of adhesion sites; the critical WSS value for ISCs is lower than that of SMEs. Our simulations show that the critical WSS value for SMEs in deoxygenated state is above 6.2 Pa (multiple adhesion sites), which is greater than their oxygenated counterparts. We investigated the effect of cell shear modulus on the detachment process; we found that for the same cell adhesion spring constant, the higher shear modulus leads to an earlier cell detachment from the functionalized surface. These findings may aid in the understanding of individual roles of sickle cell types in sickle cell disease vaso-occlusion.  相似文献   

3.
Vascular endothelial cells synthesize an extracellular matrix or basal lamina composed of collagens, proteoglycans and glycoproteins such as fibronectin (FN). Using affinity-purified anti-FN, we have examined the role of FN in adherence of metastatic B16 melanoma cells to endothelial cell monolayers which lack FN on apical cell surfaces and to their basal lamina which contains FN. B16 melanoma cells, which do not contain significant amounts of FN, attached at much higher rates to endothelial basal lamina and polyvinyl-immobilized FN compared with intact endothelial cell monolayers. Anti-FN failed to inhibit attachment of melanoma sublines of low (B16-F1) or high (B16-F10) metastatic potential to intact endothelial cell monolayers, inhibited slightly B16 cell attachment to basal lamina and completely abolished attachment of B16 cells to polyvinyl-immobilized FN. The antibiotic tunicamycin which inhibits glycosylation of B16 cell surface glycoproteins and blocks experimental metastasis [18] inhibited B16 attachment to endothelial cells, basal lamina and immobilized FN. The results suggest that FN mediates, only in part, the adhesion of B16 melanoma cells to basal lamina through glycoprotein receptors on B16 cells.  相似文献   

4.
During their passage through the circulatory system, tumor cells undergo extensive interactions with various host cells including endothelial cells. The capacity of tumor cells to form metastasis is related to their ability to interact with and extravasate through endothelial cell layers, which involves multiple adhesive interactions between tumor cells and endothelium (EC). Thus it is essential to identify the adhesive receptors on the endothelial and melanoma surface that mediate those specific adhesive interactions. P-selectin and E-selectin have been reported as adhesion molecules that mediate the cell-cell interaction of endothelial cells and melanoma cells. However, not all melanoma cells express ligands for selectins. In this study, we elucidated the molecular constituents involved in the endothelial adhesion and extravasation of sialyl-Lewis(x/a)-negative melanoma cell lines under flow in the presence and absence of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs). Results show the interactions of alpha(4)beta(1) (VLA-4) on sialyl-Lewis(x/a)-negative melanoma cells and vascular adhesion molecule (VCAM-1) on inflamed EC supported melanoma adhesion to and subsequent extravasation through the EC in low shear flow. These findings provide clear evidence for a direct role of the VLA-4/VCAM-1 pathway in melanoma cell adhesion to and extravasation through the vascular endothelium in a shear flow. PMNs facilitated melanoma cell extravasation under both low and high shear conditions via the involvement of distinct molecular mechanisms. In the low shear regime, beta(2)-integrins were sufficient to enhance melanoma cell extravasation, whereas in the high shear regime, selectin ligands and beta(2)-integrins on PMNs were necessary for facilitating the melanoma extravasation process.  相似文献   

5.
The small GTPase RhoA modulates the adhesive nature of many cell types; however, despite high levels of expression in platelets, there is currently limited evidence for an important role for this small GTPase in regulating platelet adhesion processes. In this study, we have examined the role of RhoA in regulating the adhesive function of the major platelet integrin, alpha(IIb)beta(3). Our studies demonstrate that activation of RhoA occurs as a general feature of platelet activation in response to soluble agonists (thrombin, ADP, collagen), immobilized matrices (von Willebrand factor (vWf), fibrinogen) and high shear stress. Blocking the ligand binding function of integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3), by pretreating platelets with c7E3 Fab, demonstrated the existence of integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3)-dependent and -independent mechanisms regulating RhoA activation. Inhibition of RhoA (C3 exoenzyme) or its downstream effector Rho kinase had no effect on integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) activation induced by soluble agonists or adhesive substrates, however, both inhibitors reduced shear-dependent platelet adhesion on immobilized vWf and shear-induced platelet aggregation in suspension. Detailed analysis of the sequential adhesive steps required for stable platelet adhesion on a vWf matrix under shear conditions revealed that RhoA did not regulate platelet tethering to vWf or the initial formation of integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) adhesion contacts but played a major role in sustaining stable platelet-matrix interactions. These studies define a critical role for RhoA in regulating the stability of integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) adhesion contacts under conditions of high shear stress.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of fluorescently labeled blood platelets with fibrinogen-coated glass was studied in Poiseuille flow at 3 wall shear rates, 40, 80 and 944 s-1. Observations were made via video-microscopy at a distance of 0.5 cm from a tube's entrance over a 1370 microns 2 portion of luminal area. The rates of arrival and detachment, and the net rate of adhesion of cells increased nonlinearly with flow rate. The fraction of arriving cells, first contacts, which adhered without subsequent movement and the fraction of arriving cells which adhered, moved to new positions and then remained adherent, were maximal at 80 s-1. For platelets which adhere and then move to a number of new positions, the likelihood of permanent adhesion is greater than 85 percent. The adhesion process is one in which 40-60 percent of cells permanently adhere on first contact with an additional 30 percent adhering after several moves along the surface. Cells contacting where a platelet was previously adherent had a greater chance of adhering than they would on an unaltered fibrinogen surface. The efficiency of platelet adhesion is greater for second contacts than for first contacts on unaltered fibrinogen coated surface.  相似文献   

7.
Enhanced osteoblast adhesion on transglutaminase 2-crosslinked fibronectin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fibronectin (FN) is a cell adhesion protein that binds integrins in a process also involving the protein-crosslinking enzyme transglutaminase 2 (TG2) as a co-receptor. The cell-adhesive property of TG2 has been linked to a complex formation with FN and to its ability to crosslink and polymerize FN on the cell surface. We tested here the effects of extracellular FN, before and after in vitro crosslinking and polymerization by TG2, on MC3T3-E1 osteoblast adhesion. We show that TG2-mediated crosslinking creates large, compacted chain-like protein clusters that include both TG2 and FN molecules as analyzed by Western blotting and atomic force microscopy. Crosslinking of FN significantly promotes osteoblast adhesion as measured by crystal violet staining, and enhances β1-integrin clustering on the cell surface as visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy. We hypothesize that TG2-mediated crosslinking enhances the cell-adhesive properties of FN by increasing the molecular rigidity of FN in the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

8.
In order to determine the response of fixed and nonfixed cells adherent to a solid substratum to shear stress, human fibroblasts were allowed to adhere and spread on either hydrophilic glass or hydrophobic Fluoroethylene-propylene (FEP-Teflon) and fixed with glutaraldehyde. Then, the cells were exposed to an incrementally loaded shear stress in a parallel plate flow chamber up to shear stresses of about 500 dynes/cm2, followed by exposure to a liquid-air interface passage. The cellular detachment was compared with the one of nonfixed cells. In case of fixed cells, 50% of the adhering cells detached from FEP-Teflon at a shear stress of 350 dynes/cm2, whereas 50% of the adhering, nonfixed cells detached already at a shear stress of 20 dynes/cm2. No fixed cells detached from glass for shear stresses up to at least 500 dynes/cm2. More than 50% of the nonfixed cells were detached from glass at a shear stress of 350 dynes/cm2. Furthermore, the shape and morphology of fixed cells did not change during the incrementally loaded flow, in contrast to the ones of nonfixed cells, which clearly rounded up prior to detachment.  相似文献   

9.
Cell migration in blood flow is mediated by engagement of specialized adhesion molecules that function under hemodynamic shear conditions, and many of the effectors of these adhesive interactions, such as the selectins and their ligands, are well defined. However, in contrast, our knowledge of the adhesion molecules operant under lymphatic flow conditions is incomplete. Among human malignancies, head and neck squamous cell cancer displays a marked predilection for locoregional lymph node metastasis. Based on this distinct tropism, we hypothesized that these cells express adhesion molecules that promote their binding to lymphoid tissue under lymphatic fluid shear stress. Accordingly, we investigated adhesive interactions between these and other cancer cells and the principal resident cells of lymphoid organs, lymphocytes. Parallel plate flow chamber studies under defined shear conditions, together with biochemical analyses, showed that human head and neck squamous cell cancer cells express heretofore unrecognized L-selectin ligand(s) that mediate binding to lymphocyte L-selectin at conspicuously low shear stress levels of 0.07-0.08 dynes/cm(2), consistent with lymphatic flow. The binding of head and neck squamous cancer cells to L-selectin displays canonical biochemical features, such as requirements for sialylation, sulfation, and N-glycosylation, but displays a novel operational shear threshold differing from all other L-selectin ligands, including those expressed on colon cancer and leukemic cells (e.g. HCELL). These data define a novel class of L-selectin ligands and expand the scope of function for L-selectin within circulatory systems to now include a novel activity within shear stresses characteristic of lymphatic flow.  相似文献   

10.
The fluid dynamic interaction of cavitation bubbles with adherent cells on a substrate is experimentally investigated. We find that the nonspherical collapse of bubbles near to the boundary is responsible for cell detachment. High-speed photography reveals that a wall bounded flow leads to the detachment of cells. Cells at the edge of the circular area of detachment are found to be permanently porated, whereas cells at some distance from the detachment area undergo viable cell membrane poration (sonoporation). The wall flow field leading to cell detachment is modeled with a self-similar solution for a wall jet, together with a kinetic ansatz of adhesive bond rupture. The self-similar solution for the delta-type wall jet compares very well with the full solution of the Navier-Stokes equation for a jet of finite thickness. Apart from annular sites of sonoporation we also find more homogenous patterns of molecule delivery with no cell detachment.  相似文献   

11.
Monocyte adhesion to the endothelium depends on concentrations of receptors/ligands, local concentrations of chemoattractants, monocyte transport to the endothelial surface and hemodynamic forces. Monocyte adhesion to the inert surface of a three-dimensional perfusion model was shown to correlate inversely with wall shear stress, but was also affected by flow patterns which influenced the near-wall cell availability. We hypothesized that (a) under the same flow conditions, insolubilized E-selectin on the model's surface may mediate adhesive interactions at higher wall shear stresses, compared to an uncoated model, and (b) pulsatile flow may modify the adhesion profile obtained under steady flow. An axisymmetric flow model with a stenosis and a sudden expansion produced a range of wall shear stresses and a separated flow with recirculation and reattachment. Pre-activated U937 cells were perfused through the model under either steady (Re = 100, 140) or pulsatile (Remean = 107) flow. The velocity field was characterized through computational fluid dynamics and validated by inert particle tracking. Surface E-selectin greatly increased cell adhesion in all regions at Re = 100 and 140, compared to an uncoated model under the same flow conditions. In regions where the cells near the wall were abundant (taper and stenosis), adhesion to E-selectin correlated with the reciprocal of local wall shear stress when flow was steady. Pulsatile flow distributed the adherent cells more evenly throughout the coated model. Hence, characterizing both the local hemodynamics and the biological activity on the vessel wall is important in leukocyte adhesion.  相似文献   

12.
The contributions of the canine neutrophil lectin adhesion molecule-1 (LECAM-1) (canine homologue of the murine MEL-14 Ag) in neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesion and transendothelial migration were studied using anti-LECAM-1 mAb, CL2/6, and SL1 under static conditions and at wall shear stresses of up to 1.85 dynes/cm2 (dpc). Both mAb were found to inhibit attachment of neutrophils to cytokine-stimulated canine jugular vein endothelium. The inhibitory effects of the anti-LECAM-1 mAb were more evident at a wall shear stress of 1.85 dpc (greater than 50%) than at 0.23 dpc or under static conditions (approximately 30%). In contrast the anti-CD18 mAb, R15.7, exhibited higher inhibitory ability at the lower shear stress and under static conditions with marginal inhibition of adhesion at 1.85 dpc. Anti-LECAM-1 and anti-CD18 mAb showed additive inhibitory effects at the lower wall shear stress and under static conditions. Chemotactic stimulation of the neutrophils caused rapid down-regulation of LECAM-1 from the neutrophil surface and reduced adhesion by 60% at a wall shear stress of 1.85 dpc. This inhibition was not additive to anti-LECAM-1 mAb. Pretreatment with CL2/6 or SL1 did not affect trans-endothelial migration of adherent neutrophils under any experimental conditions tested. Anti-CD18 mAb, however, blocked transendothelial migration by 98% and 56% under static condition and at a wall shear stress of 0.23 dpc, respectively. The results in this report indicate that canine LECAM-1 is involved in the initial adhesion of unstimulated neutrophils to cytokine-stimulated endothelial cells under flow, but in contrast to CD18-integrins, plays no role in the transendothelial migration.  相似文献   

13.
An in vitro flow apparatus in combination with cultured endothelium was used to determine the effects of fluid-generated shear stress on cells undergoing mitosis and cytokinesis. Cell responses were recorded by time-lapse video microscopy under phase contrast or Hoffman modulation contrast optics. Completion of cell division in mitotic cells was dependent upon both the initial presence of intercellular attachments and the magnitude of fluid wall shear stress. In nonisolated populations, 95.3%, 69.5%, and 57.1% of the cells completed cell division as opposed to 66.6%, 20.4%, and 11.9% in the isolated cell groups at 2.8, 14.1, and 33 dynes/cm2, respectively. Prestressing cells for 14 h prior to monitoring failed to increase retention of isolated mitotic cells. The presence of neighboring cells facilitated replication by providing an anchoring attachment or a luminal surface for completion of division. Cell detachment most commonly occurred at the onset of cytokinesis when substrate contact areas were minimal and focal contacts were absent. A comparison between no flow controls and shear stress specimens indicated no significant differences in transit times for mitosis and cytokinesis. Thus, subconfluent endothelial cells may be more susceptible to detachment during cell division due to increases in shear stress, the absence of intercellular attachments, and reduced cell-substrate contacts. © 1994 wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
In order to determine the response of fixed and nonfixed cells adherent to a solid substratum to shear stress, human fibroblasts were allowed to adhere and spread on either hydrophilic glass or hydrophobic Fluoroethylene-propylene (FEP-Teflon) and fixed with glutaraldehyde. Then, the cells were exposed to an incrementally loaded shear stress in a parallel plate flow chamber up to shear stresses of about 500 dynes/cm2, followed by exposure to a liquid-air interface passage. The cellular detachment was compared with the one of nonfixed cells. In case of fixed cells, 50% of the adhering cells detached from FEP-Teflon at a shear stress of 350 dynes/cm2, whereas 50% of the adhering, nonfixed cells detached already at a shear stress of 20 dynes/cm2. No fixed cells detached from glass for shear stresses up to at least 500 dynes/cm2. More than 50% of the nonfixed cells were detached from glass at a shear stress of 350 dynes/cm2. Furthermore, the shape and morphology of fixed cells did not change during the incrementally loaded flow, in contrast to the ones of nonfixed cells, which clearly rounded up prior to detachment.  相似文献   

15.
Previously, we have shown that some lymphoid cell lines adhere to fibronectin (FN)-coated substratum, whereas others do not. In this study, the adhesion of five adherent lymphoid cell lines to different FN domains was examined. These cell lines ranged in their adherence to substratum coated with FN, the cell-binding domain (CBD) fragment, or the heparin-binding domain (HBD) fragments. None of the cell lines adhered to substratum coated with the gelatin-binding domain fragment. Three of the lymphoid cell lines adhered preferentially to HBD over CBD, whereas two other lymphoid cell lines and BHK fibroblasts adhered preferentially to CBD. These results suggest that two distinct adhesive interactions occur between cells and FN and that the pattern of interaction varies among cell types. Using MOPC 315 (which adheres preferentially to HBD) as a cell model to study the cell-HBD interaction, the HBD-promoted adhesion was found to be independent of the RGD sequence and could be inhibited by anti-FN antibodies. Moreover, the MOPC 315-HBD interaction had the following characteristics: (1) adhesion was temperature dependent, (2) presence of divalent cations was necessary, (3) integrity of cellular microfilaments but not microtubules was required, (4) inhibition of protein synthesis abolished adhesion, (5) pretreatment of cells with trypsin inhibited adhesion, and (6) the adhesion was mediated by the carboxyl-terminal HBD.  相似文献   

16.
The process of cell-substratum adhesion of BALB/c 3T3 fibroblasts on fibronectin (FN)-coated substrata was compared with that of cells adhering to substrata coated with the heparan sulfate (HS)-binding protein, platelet factor four (PF4). FN has binding domains for HS and an unidentified cell surface receptor, whereas PF4 binds to only HS on the surface of the cell. The attachment and early spreading sequences of cells on either substratum were similar as shown by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Within 2 h of spreading, cells on FN developed typical fibroblastic morphologies, whereas those on PF4 lacked polygonal orientations and formed numerous broadly spread lamellae. Interference reflection microscopic analysis indicated that PF4-adherent cells formed only close adhesive contacts, whereas FN-adherent cells formed both close contacts and tight focal contacts. Cells on either substratum responded to Ca2+ chelation with EGTA by rounding up, but remained adherent to the substratum by relatively EGTA-resistant regions of the cell's undersurface, demonstrating that cell surface HS by binding to an appropriate substratum is capable of initiating a Ca2+-dependent spreading response. The EGTA-resistant substratum-attached material on PF4 was morphologically similar to that on FN, the latter of which was derived from both tight focal contacts and discrete specializations within certain close contacts. These studies show that heparan sulfate proteoglycans on the surface of these cells can participate in the formation of close contact adhesions by binding to an appropriate substratum and suggest that sub-specializations within close contact adhesions may evolve into tight focal contacts by the participation of an unidentified cell surface receptor which binds specifically to fibronectin but not to PF4. In addition, the functional role of FN in tight focal contact formation is demonstrated.  相似文献   

17.
Disturbances of blood flow play an important role in promoting platelet activation and arterial thrombus formation in stenosed, injured, atherosclerotic arteries. To date, glycoprotein Ib (GPIb) has been considered the primary platelet mechanosensory receptor, responding to increased shear with enhanced adhesive and signaling function. We demonstrate here that von Willebrand factor-GPIb interaction is inefficient at inducing platelet activation even when platelets are exposed to very high wall shear stresses (60 dyn/cm(2)). Rapid platelet activation under flow was only observed under experimental conditions in which transiently adherent platelets were exposed to sudden accelerations in blood flow. Platelet responsiveness to temporal shear gradients was integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3)-dependent and occurred only on a von Willebrand factor substrate, as platelets forming integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) adhesive contacts with immobilized fibrinogen were unresponsive to sudden increases in shear. The calcium response induced by temporal shear gradients was distinct from previously identified integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3) calcium responses in terms of its transient nature, its requirement for platelet co-stimulation by the P2Y(1) purinergic ADP receptor, and its dependence on the influx of extracellular calcium. Our studies demonstrate a key role for temporal shear gradients in promoting platelet activation. Moreover, they define for the first time the involvement of P2Y receptors in integrin mechanotransduction.  相似文献   

18.
A turbulent channel flow apparatus was used to determine the adhesion strength of the three perimetamorphic stages of the asteroid Asterina gibbosa, i.e. the brachiolaria larvae, the metamorphic individuals and the juveniles. The mean critical wall shear stresses (wall shear stress required to dislodge 50% of the attached individuals) necessary to detach larvae attached by the brachiolar arms (1.2 Pa) and juveniles attached by the tube feet (7.1 Pa) were one order of magnitude lower than the stress required to dislodge metamorphic individuals attached by the adhesive disc (41 Pa). This variability in adhesion strength reflects differences in the functioning of the adhesive organs for these different life stages of sea stars. Brachiolar arms and tube feet function as temporary adhesion organs, allowing repetitive cycles of attachment to and detachment from the substratum, whereas the adhesive disc is used only once, at the onset of metamorphosis, and is responsible for the strong attachment of the metamorphic individual, which can be described as permanent adhesion. The results confirm that the turbulent water channel apparatus is a powerful tool to investigate the adhesion mechanisms of minute organisms.  相似文献   

19.
Fibronectin (FN) is a ubiquitously expressed cell adhesion protein capable of assembling into large, extended fibrillar networks as part of an extracellular matrix (ECM) that regulates cell behavior. FN is a substrate for certain members of the transglutaminase family of protein-crosslinking enzymes-enzymes which can modify the ability of FN to support cell adhesion. In this study, we have analyzed the thermo-chemical stability of plasma FN in its noncrosslinked form, and after crosslinking by transglutaminase 2 (TG2), using dynamic light scattering. We report that FN is found in a generally globular (8.7 nm hydrodynamic radius), dimerized form in aqueous solutions, but unfolds into a linear arrangement at high ionic (1 M NaCl) and chaotropic (5 M urea) environments. FN conformation remained stable after multiple heating and cooling cycles ranging from 4 to 60 degrees C. Crosslinking of FN with TG2 formed large, multimeric complexes having high chemical stability in aqueous, high ionic and chaotropic environments, demonstrating that this covalent modification stabilizes FN. Given recent data that substrate (e.g. ECM) rigidity profoundly affects cell differentiation and behavior, we further studied how TG2 crosslinking affects the molecular rigidity of FN by obtaining atomic force microscopy nanoindentation measurements from untreated and crosslinked FN samples embedded in acrylamide gels. We demonstrate that TG2-mediated crosslinking of FN significantly increases Young's modulus (of elasticity), an observation of increased rigidity having important implications with respect to the biological role of ECM protein-crosslinking in cell signaling and guiding cell differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
On inflamed endothelium selectins support neutrophil capture and rolling that leads to firm adhesion through the activation and binding of beta 2 integrin. The primary mechanism of cell activation involves ligation of chemotactic agonists presented on the endothelium. We have pursued a second mechanism involving signal transduction through binding of selectins while neutrophils tether in shear flow. We assessed whether neutrophil rolling on E-selectin led to cell activation and arrest via beta 2integrins. Neutrophils were introduced into a parallel plate flow chamber having as a substrate an L cell monolayer coexpressing E-selectin and ICAM-1 (E/I). At shears >/=0.1 dyne/cm2, neutrophils rolled on the E/I. A step increase to 4.0 dynes/cm2 revealed that approximately 60% of the interacting cells remained firmly adherent, as compared with approximately 10% on L cells expressing E-selectin or ICAM-1 alone. Cell arrest was dependent on application of shear and activation of Mac-1 and LFA-1 to bind ICAM-1. Firm adhesion was inhibited by blocking E-selectin, L-selectin, or PSGL-1 with Abs and by inhibitors to the mitogen-activated protein kinases. A chimeric soluble E-selectin-IgG molecule specifically bound sialylated ligands on neutrophils and activated adhesion that was also inhibited by blocking the mitogen-activated protein kinases. We conclude that neutrophils rolling on E-selectin undergo signal transduction leading to activation of cell arrest through beta 2 integrins binding to ICAM-1.  相似文献   

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