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1.
Leukocyte P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) is expressed as a homodimer and mediates leukocyte rolling through interactions with endothelial P-selectin. Previous studies have shown that PSGL-1 must be properly modified by specific glycosyltransferases including alpha1,3-fucosyltransferase-VII, core 2 beta1-6-N-glucosaminyltransferase (C2GlcNAcT-I), one or more alpha2,3-sialytransferases, and a tyrosulfotransferase. In addition, dimerization of PSGL-1 through its sole extracellular cysteine (Cys(320)) is essential for rolling on P-selectin under shear conditions. In this report, we measured the contributions of both C2GlcNAcT-I glycosylation and dimerization of PSGL-1 to adhesive bonds formed during tethering and rolling of transfected cell lines on purified P-selectin. Tethering to P-selectin under flow increased with dimerization compared with cells expressing monomeric PSGL-1 (referred to as C320A). The rolling defects (decreased cellular accumulation, PSGL-1/P-selectin bond strengths and tethering rates, and increased velocities and skip distance) demonstrated by transfectants expressing monomeric PSGL-1 could be overcome by increasing the substrate P-selectin site density and by overexpressing C2GlcNAcT-I in C320A transfectants. Two molecular weight variants of PSGL-1 were isolated from cell lines transfected with PSGL-1, C320A, and/or C2GlcNAcT-I cDNAs, and these differences in electrophoretic mobility appeared to correlate with C2GlcNAcT-I expression. C320A transfectants expressing low molecular weight PSGL-1 had lower C2GlcNAcT-I levels (measured by reactivity to core 2 specific linkage antibody, CHO-131) and compromised rolling on P-selectin (regardless of site density) compared with C320A cells with high levels of C2GlcNAcT-I and high molecular weight PSGL-1. Both C2GlcNAcT-I glycosylation and PSGL-1 dimerization increased the rate of tethering to P-selectin under flow, whereas C2GlcNAcT-I levels primarily influenced tether bond strength.  相似文献   

2.
P-selectin on platelets and endothelial cells and E-selectin on endothelial cells are leukocyte receptors that recognize lineage-specific carbohydrates on neutrophils and monocytes. The proposed ligands for these receptors contain the Le(x) core and sialic acid. Since other investigators have shown that both E-selectin and P-selectin bind to sialylated Le(x), we evaluated whether E-selectin and P-selectin recognize the same counter-receptor on leukocytes. The interaction of HL60 cells with Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing P-selectin or E-selectin was studied. To determine whether a protein component is required in addition to sialyl Le(x) for either P-selectin or E-selectin recognition, HL60 cells or neutrophils were digested with proteases, including chymotrypsin, elastase, proteinase Glu-C, ficin, papain, or thermolysin. Cells treated with these proteases bound E-selectin but not P-selectin. Fucosidase or neuraminidase treatment of HL60 cells markedly decreased binding to both E-selectin- and P-selectin-expressing CHO cells. Growth of HL60 cells in tunicamycin inhibited the ability of these cells to support P-selectin-mediated binding and, to a lesser extent, E-selectin-mediated binding. Purified P-selectin inhibited CHO:P-selectin binding to HL60 cells, but incompletely inhibited CHO:E-selectin binding to HL60 cells. However, purified soluble E-selectin inhibited CHO:P-selectin and CHO:E-selectin binding to HL60 cells equivalently and completely. COS cells, unable to bind to E-selectin or P-selectin, bound E-selectin but not P-selectin upon transfection with alpha-1,3-fucosyltransferase or alpha-1,3/1,4-fucosyltransferase. Similarly, LEC 11 cells expressing sialyl Le(x) bound E-selectin- but not P-selectin-expressing CHO cells. Sambucus nigra lectin, specific for the sialyl-2,6 beta Gal/GalNAc linkage, inhibited P-selectin but not E-selectin binding to HL60 cells. Although sialic acid and Le(x) are components of the P-selectin ligand and the E-selectin ligand, these results indicate that the ligands are related, having overlapping specificities, but are structurally distinct. A protein component containing sialyl Le(x) in proximity to sialyl-2,6 beta Gal structures on the P-selectin ligand may contribute to its specificity for P-selectin.  相似文献   

3.
Leukocyte adhesion to vascular endothelium under flow involves an adhesion cascade consisting of multiple receptor pairs that may function in an overlapping fashion. P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) and L-selectin have been implicated in neutrophil adhesion to P- and E-selectin under flow conditions. To study, in isolation, the interaction of PSGL-1 with P-and E-selectin under flow, we developed an in vitro model in which various recombinant regions of extracellular PSGL-1 were coupled to 10-μm-diameter microspheres. In a parallel plate chamber with well defined flow conditions, live time video microscopy analyses revealed that microspheres coated with PSGL-1 attached and rolled on 4-h tumor necrosis factor-α–activated endothelial cell monolayers, which express high levels of E-selectin, and CHO monolayers stably expressing E-or P-selectin. Further studies using CHO-E and -P monolayers demonstrate that the first 19 amino acids of PSGL-1 are sufficient for attachment and rolling on both E- and P-selectin and suggest that a sialyl Lewis x–containing glycan at Threonine-16 is critical for this sequence of amino acids to mediate attachment to E- and P-selectin. The data also demonstrate that a sulfated, anionic polypeptide segment within the amino terminus of PSGL-1 is necessary for PSGL-1–mediated attachment to P- but not to E-selectin. In addition, the results suggest that PSGL-1 has more than one binding site for E-selectin: one site located within the first 19 amino acids of PSGL-1 and one or more sites located between amino acids 19 through 148.  相似文献   

4.
P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) interacts with selectins to support leukocyte rolling along vascular wall. L- and P-selectin bind to N-terminal tyrosine sulfate residues and to core-2 O-glycans attached to Thr-57, whereas tyrosine sulfation is not required for E-selectin binding. PSGL-1 extracellular domain contains decameric repeats, which extend L- and P-selectin binding sites far above the plasma membrane. We hypothesized that decamers may play a role in regulating PSGL-1 interactions with selectins. Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing wild-type PSGL-1 or PSGL-1 molecules exhibiting deletion or substitution of decamers with the tandem repeats of platelet glycoprotein Ibalpha were compared in their ability to roll on selectins and to bind soluble L- or P-selectin. Deletion of decamers abrogated soluble L-selectin binding and cell rolling on L-selectin, whereas their substitution partially reversed these diminutions. P-selectin-dependent interactions with PSGL-1 were less affected by decamer deletion. Videomicroscopy analysis showed that decamers are required to stabilize L-selectin-dependent rolling. Importantly, adhesion assays performed on recombinant decamers demonstrated that they directly bind to E-selectin and promote slow rolling. Our results indicate that the role of decamers is to extend PSGL-1 N terminus far above the cell surface to support and stabilize leukocyte rolling on L- or P-selectin. In addition, they function as a cell adhesion receptor, which supports approximately 80% of E-selectin-dependent rolling.  相似文献   

5.
Recombinant soluble human complement receptor type 1 (sCR1) is a highly glycosylated glycoprotein intended for use as a drug to treat ischemia-reperfusion injury and other complement-mediated diseases and injuries. sCR1-sLe(x) produced in the FT-VI-expressing mutant CHO cell line LEC11 exists as a heterogeneous mixture of glycoforms, a fraction of which include structures with one or more antennae terminated by the sialyl Lewis X (sLe(x)) [Neu5Acalpha2-3Galbeta1-4(Fucalpha1-3)GlcNAc]) epitope. Such multivalent presentation of sLe(x) was shown previously to effectively target sCR1 to activated endothelial cells expressing E-selectin. Here, we describe the use of the soluble, recombinant alpha2-3 sialyltransferase ST3Gal-III and the alpha1-3 fucosyltransferase FT-VI in vitro to introduce sLe(x) moieties onto the N-glycan chains of sCR1 overexpressed in standard CHO cell lines. The product (sCR1-S/F) of these in vitro enzymatic glycan remodeling reactions performed at the 10-g scale has approximately 14 N-glycan chains per sCR1 molecule, comprised of biantennary (90%), triantennary (8.5%), and tetraantennary (1.5%) structures, nearly all of whose antennae terminate with sLe(x) moieties. sCR1-S/F retained complement inhibitory activity and, in comparison with sCR1-sLe(x) produced in the LEC11 cell line, contained twice the number of sLe(x) moieties per mole glycoprotein, exhibited a twofold increase in area under the intravenous clearance curve in a rat pharmacokinetic model, and exhibited a 10-fold increase in affinity for E-selectin in an in vitro binding assay. These results demonstrate that in vitro glycosylation of the sCR1 drug product reduces heterogeneity of the glycan profile, improves pharmacokinetics, and enhances carbohydrate-mediated binding to E-selectin.  相似文献   

6.
IL-4 is known to induce recruitment of eosinophils and mononuclear leukocytes. In vitro this occurs in part by selective expression of VCAM-1, the ligand for the alpha 4 integrin. The objective of this study was to determine the molecular mechanisms that underlie IL-4-induced leukocyte recruitment in vivo. Mice received an intrascrotal injection of IL-4 (100 ng). Twenty-four hours later, leukocyte rolling, adhesion, and emigration in cremasteric postcapillary venules were examined via intravital microscopy, and expression of VCAM-1 and P- and E-selectin was quantitated using a radiolabeled mAb technique. IL-4 increased VCAM-1 expression, but P-selectin and E-selectin remained at constitutive levels. IL-4 induced significant increases in leukocyte adhesion and emigration, with 50% of the emigrated cells being eosinophils and the remainder being mononuclear leukocytes. Leukocyte rolling in IL-4-treated mice was >95% inhibitable using an anti-P-selectin Ab. However, IL-4-induced leukocyte recruitment was unaltered in mice treated chronically with P-selectin Ab or mice deficient in either P-selectin or P- and E-selectin, suggesting that the residual rolling supported all of the IL-4-induced recruitment. In IL-4-treated mice following P-selectin blockade, tethering and rolling were not dependent on L-selectin, but were abolished by alpha 4 integrin blockade. These findings show that the alpha 4 integrin can initiate leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions in the absence of selectins under shear conditions in vivo, and that the absence of selectins does not affect recruitment of eosinophils and mononuclear cells to IL-4-treated tissue.  相似文献   

7.
P- and E-selectin are surface glycoproteins that mediate leukocyte rolling on the surface of endothelium in inflammation. We have cloned porcine P-selectin cDNA and generated a mAb, 12C5, with which to examine P-selectin expression by porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAEC) in comparison with that of E-selectin. Basal expression by PAEC of P-selectin was greater than that of E-selectin, whereas E-selectin expression was more prominently enhanced than that of P-selectin by stimulation with TNF-alpha or IL-1alpha. Both human or porcine IL-4 led to an increase in P-selectin expression, with kinetics that were delayed compared with those seen following stimulation with TNF-alpha or IL-1alpha, but IL-4 did not stimulate expression of E-selectin. When cells were stimulated with TNF-alpha in the presence of IL-4, we observed enhanced P-selectin expression with a parallel reduction in E-selectin expression. Finally, the increase in P-selectin expression due to human IL-4 was reduced in the presence of porcine but not human IFN-gamma. These observations show that E-selectin and P-selectin expression are differentially regulated in PAEC, and that IL-4 leads to a shift in the relative surface density of the two molecules toward P-selectin. The ability of porcine IFN-gamma to inhibit IL-4-induced P-selectin expression suggests that the balance between Th1 and Th2 cytokine production may determine the relative densities of the two selectins in chronic immune-mediated inflammation. Because the increased expression of P-selectin induced by human IL-4 was not inhibited by human IFN-gamma, this balance may be shifted toward P-selectin expression in porcine xenografts infiltrated by human lymphocytes.  相似文献   

8.
P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) is a large (240 kDa) glycoprotein found on the surface of nearly all leukocytes. The mature molecule is decorated with multiple N- and O-linked glycans and displays copies of the tetrasaccharide sialyl-Lewis(x) (sLe(X)), as well as a cluster of three tyrosine sulfate (tyr-SO(3)) groups near the N-terminus of the processed protein. Previous studies have suggested that PSGL-1 needs to be tyrosine-sulfated, in addition to glycosylated with sLe(X), to successfully interact with P-selectin. To better understand how biochemical features of the PSGL-1 ligand are related to its adhesion phenotype, we have measured the dynamics of adhesion under flow of a series of well-defined PSGL-1 variants that differ in their biochemical modification, to both P- and E-selectin-coated substrates. These variants are distinct PSGL-1 peptides: one that possesses sLe(X) in conjunction with three N-terminal tyr-SO(3) groups (SGP3), one that possesses sLe(X) without tyrosine sulfation (GP1), and one that lacks sLe(X) but has three N-terminal tyr-SO(3) groups (SP3). Although all peptides expressing sLe(X), tyr-SO(3), or both supported some form of rolling adhesion on P-selectin, only peptides expressing sLe(X) groups showed rolling adhesion on E-selectin. On P-selectin, the PSGL-1 peptides demonstrated a decreasing strength of adhesion in the following order: SGP3 > GP1 > SP3. Robust, rolling adhesion on P-selectin was mediated by the GP1 peptide, despite its lack of tyrosine sulfation. However, the addition of tyrosine sulfation to glycosylated peptides (SGP3) creates a super ligand for P-selectin that supports slower rolling adhesion at all shear rates and supports rolling adhesion at much higher shear rates. Tyrosine sulfation has no similar effect on PSGL-1 rolling on E-selectin. Such functional distinctions in rolling dynamics are uniquely realized with a cell-free system, which permits precise, unambiguous identification of the functional activity of adhesive ligands. These findings are consistent with structural and functional characterizations of the interactions between these peptides and E- and P-selectin published recently.  相似文献   

9.
As the first step in the recruitment of neutrophils into tissues, the cells become tethered to and roll on the vessel wall. These processes are mediated by interactions between the P- and E-selectins, expressed on the endothelial cells of the vessel wall, and their ligands, expressed on the neutrophils. Recently, we reported that CD43 on activated T cells functions as an E-selectin ligand and thereby mediates T cell migration to inflamed sites, in collaboration with P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1), a major P- and E-selectin ligand. Here, we examined whether CD43 on neutrophils also functions as an E-selectin ligand. CD43 was precipitated with an E-selectin-IgG chimera from mouse bone marrow neutrophils. A CD43 deficiency diminished the E-selectin-binding activity of neutrophils when PSGL-1 was also deficient. Intravital microscopy showed that the CD43 deficiency significantly increased leukocyte rolling velocities in TNF-alpha-stimulated venules blocked with an anti-P-selectin mAb, where the rolling was mostly E-selectin dependent, when PSGL-1 was also absent. In contrast, in venules with trauma-induced inflammation, where the rolling was largely P-selectin dependent, the CD43 deficiency reduced leukocyte rolling velocities. Collectively, these observations suggest that CD43 generally serves as an antiadhesive molecule to attenuate neutrophil-endothelial interactions, but when E-selectin is expressed on endothelial cells, it also plays a proadhesive role as an E-selectin ligand.  相似文献   

10.
The multistep model of leukocyte adhesion reveals that selectins mediate rolling interactions and that integrins mediate firm adhesion processes. In this study, the interaction between eosinophils and TNF-alpha-activated HUVEC (second or third passage) was studied under flow conditions (0.8 and 3.2 dynes/cm2). Especially the role of alpha 4 integrins on eosinophils and E-selectin on HUVEC was studied. Inhibition of the integrin alpha 4 chain on eosinophils reduced the number of firmly adhered resting eosinophils to TNF-alpha-stimulated endothelium by 43% whereas the percentage rolling cells increased 2.2-fold compared with untreated control eosinophils. Blocking of E-selectin on the endothelium reduced the number of adherent eosinophils by only 23% and 16%. In this situation, however, hardly any rolling adhesion was observed, and the few rolling cells showed a low rolling velocity. Blocking both alpha 4 integrin on eosinophils and E-selectin on HUVEC reduced the number of adhered eosinophils by 95%. P-selectin did not significantly participate in eosinophil adhesion to TNF-alpha-activated HUVEC. Inhibition of both alpha 4 integrins and beta 2 integrins on eosinophils resulted in a reduction of adhered cells by 65% and a 3-fold increase in percentage rolling cells. Taken together, these results clearly show that resting eosinophils preferentially use constitutively active alpha 4 integrins (alpha 4 beta 1, alpha 4 beta 7) for the first attachment to TNF-alpha-activated HUVEC. In addition, alpha 4 integrins and E-selectin work synergistically in eosinophil adherence to TNF-alpha-activated HUVEC. Although E-selectin is important for eosinophil rolling under these conditions, P-selectin plays only a minor role.  相似文献   

11.
T lymphocyte infiltration into inflamed tissues is thought to involve lymphocyte rolling on vascular endothelial cells. Because both selectin and alpha(4) integrin adhesion molecules can mediate leukocyte rolling, the contribution of these receptors to lymphocyte migration to inflammation was examined. The recruitment of (111)In-labeled spleen T cells to intradermal sites injected with IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, LPS, poly inosine-cytosine, and Con A was measured in the rat, and the effect of blocking mAbs to E-selectin, P-selectin, very late activation Ag-4 (VLA-4), and LFA-1 was determined on this T cell migration in vivo. Anti-E-selectin and anti-P-selectin mAbs each inhibited 10-40 and 20-48%, respectively, of the T lymphocyte migration to the inflammatory sites, depending on the stimulus. Blocking VLA-4 inhibited 50% of the migration to all of the lesions except Con A. Treatment with both anti-VLA-4 and anti-E-selectin mAbs inhibited up to 85% of the lymphocyte accumulation, while P-selectin and VLA-4 blockade in combination was not more effective than VLA-4 blockade alone in TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, LPS, and poly inosine-cytosine lesions. Inhibiting E-selectin, P-selectin, and VLA-4 together nearly abolished lymphocyte migration to all inflammatory sites. Anti-LFA-1 mAb strongly inhibited lymphocyte accumulation by itself, and this inhibition was not significantly further reduced by E- or P-selectin blockade. Thus, T cell migration to dermal inflammation is dependent on E-selectin, P-selectin, and VLA-4, likely because these three receptors are required for rolling of memory T lymphocytes, but VLA-4 and E-selectin are especially important for lymphocyte infiltration in these tissues.  相似文献   

12.
The selectin family of adhesion molecules mediates attachment and rolling of neutrophils to stimulated endothelial cells. This step of the inflammatory response is a prerequisite to firm attachment and extravasation. We have reported that microspheres coated with sialyl Lewis(x) (sLe(x)) interact specifically and roll over E-selectin and P-selectin substrates (Brunk et al., 1996; Rodgers et al 2000). This paper extends the use of the cell-free system to the study of the interactions between L-selectin and sLe(x) under flow. We find that sLe(x) microspheres specifically interact with and roll on L-selectin substrates. Rolling velocity increases with wall shear stress and decreases with increasing L-selectin density. Rolling velocities are fast, between 25 and 225 microm/s, typical of L-selectin interactions. The variability of rolling velocity, quantified by the variance in rolling velocity, scales linearly with rolling velocity. Rolling flux varies with both wall shear stress and L-selectin site density. At a density of L-selectin of 800 sites/microm(2), the rolling flux of sLe(x) coated microspheres goes through a clear maximum with respect to shear stress at 0.7 dyne/cm(2). This behavior, in which the maintenance and promotion of rolling interactions on selectins requires shear stress above a threshold value, is known as the shear threshold effect. We found that the magnitude of the effect is greatest at an L-selectin density of 800 sites/microm(2) and gradually diminishes with increasing L-selectin site density. Our study is the first to reveal the shear threshold effect with a cell free system and the first to show the dependence of the shear threshold effect on L-selectin site density in a reconstituted system. Our ability to recreate the shear threshold effect in a cell-free system strongly suggests the origin of the effect is in the physical chemistry of L-selectin interaction with its ligand, and largely eliminates cellular features such as deformability or topography as its cause.  相似文献   

13.
CD43 functions as a ligand for E-Selectin on activated T cells   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
E-selectin, an inducible cell adhesion molecule expressed on endothelial cells, mediates the rolling on endothelium of leukocytes expressing E-selectin ligands, such as neutrophils and activated T cells. Although previous studies using mice lacking P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) have indicated that PSGL-1 on Th1 cells functions as an E-selectin ligand, the molecular nature of E-selectin ligands other than PSGL-1 remains unknown. In this study, we show that a 130-kDa glycoprotein was precipitated by an E-selectin-IgG chimera from mouse Th1 cells. This protein was cleaved by O-sialoglycoprotein endopeptidase and required sialic acid for E-selectin binding. The mAb 1B11, which recognizes the 130-kDa glycoform of CD43, recognized the 130-kDa band in the E-selectin-IgG precipitate. In addition, immunoprecipitation of the E-selectin-IgG precipitate with 1B11 depleted the 130-kDa protein, further confirming its identity as CD43. CD43 was also precipitated with E-selectin-IgG from cultured human T cells. E-selectin-dependent cell rolling on CD43 was observed under flow conditions using a CD43-IgG chimera generated in Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing alpha-1,3-fucosyltransferase VII and a core 2 beta-1,6-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase. These results suggest that CD43, when modified by a specific set of glycosyltranferases, can function as an E-selectin ligand and therefore potentially mediate activated T cell migration into inflamed sites.  相似文献   

14.
Although known for its role in hemostasis, there is a growing body of evidence that thrombin can induce leukocyte recruitment and contribute to the inflammatory response. An in vitro parallel-plate flow chamber was used to systematically examine thrombin-induced neutrophil interactions with human endothelium. Stimulation of endothelial cells with thrombin (1 U/ml) resulted in an immediate, P-selectin-dependent increase in neutrophil rolling and adhesion that was comparable in magnitude to optimal levels of histamine (the classical inducer of P-selectin). However, thrombin, but not histamine, induced a delayed (4 h) E-selectin-dependent rolling similar to that of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, suggesting that thrombin has the unique ability to recruit neutrophils by an early P-selectin and a delayed E-selectin pathway. Surprisingly, inhibition of E-selectin expression with the general protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide induced P-selectin expression 4 h after thrombin stimulation. Cycloheximide and thrombin (4 h) induced sufficient P-selectin-dependent rolling to recruit as many neutrophils as were recruited with 4 h of stimulation with thrombin alone. Histamine in the presence of cycloheximide or cycloheximide alone did not evoke the P-selectin response at 4 h, suggesting that this was not due to direct cycloheximide induction of P-selectin. Treatment of endothelium with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (an E-selectin inducer) and cycloheximide also eliminated E-selectin expression but, much like thrombin, induced P-selectin expression and neutrophil recruitment. In conclusion, inhibition of E-selectin via protein synthesis inhibition activates the protein synthesis-independent pathway of P-selectin expression to support adequate leukocyte recruitment.  相似文献   

15.
E-selectin is a cytokine-inducible, calcium-dependent endothelial cell adhesion molecule that plays a critical role in the leucocyte-endothelium interaction during inflammation and is thought to contribute to the metastatic dissemination of tumour cells. Like the other selectins, E-selectin binds to ligands carrying the tetrasaccharide sialyl-Lewis x (NeuAcalpha2,3Galbeta1,4[Fucalpha1, 3]GlcNAc)1 or its isomer sialyl-Lewis a (NeuAcalpha2, 3Galbeta1, 3[Fucalpha1,4]GlcNAc). We examined the effect of expressing the H-type alpha(1,2)-fucosyltransferase or the alpha(2, 6)-sialyltransferase on the synthesis of sialyl-Lewis x by alpha(1, 3)fucosyltransferase. We found that H-type alpha(1, 2)-fucosyltransferase but not alpha(2,6)-sialyltransferase, strongly inhibited sialyl-Lewis x expression and E-selectin adhesion. We assume that H-type alpha(1,2)-fucosyltransferase competes with the endogenous alpha(2,3)-sialyltransferase for the N-acetyllactosamine structures assigned to further serve as acceptors for alpha(1, 3)fucosyltransferase.  相似文献   

16.
P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1), a dimeric mucin on leukocytes, is the best characterized ligand for selectins. P-selectin binds stereospecifically to the extreme N terminus of PSGL-1, which contains three clustered tyrosine sulfates (TyrSO3-) adjacent to a Thr residue with a core 2-based O-glycan expressing sialyl Lewis x (C2-O-sLe(x)). GSP-6, a synthetic glycosulfopeptide modeled after the N terminus of PSGL-1, containing three TyrSO3- residues and a short, monofucosylated C2-O-sLe(x) bound to P-selectin with high affinity (K(d) approximately 650 nm). However, PSGL-1 from human HL-60 cells contains higher levels of O-glycans that are sialylated and polyfucosylated polylactosamines (PFPL). Furthermore, studies with fucosyltransferase-deficient mice suggest that sialylated PFPL structures contribute to binding to P-selectin. To resolve whether sialylated PFPL O-glycans participate in binding of PSGL-1 to human P-selectin, we synthesized glycosulfopeptides, designated GSP-6' and GSP-6", with three TyrSO3- residues and either difucosylated polylactosamine (C2-O-Le(x)-sLe(x)) or trifucosylated polylactosamine (C2-O-Le(x)-Le(x)-sLe(x)). Binding of the GSPs to P-selectin was measured by affinity chromatography, fluorescence solid-phase assays, and equilibrium gel filtration. Unexpectedly, both GSP-6' and GSP-6" bound to P-selectin with low affinity (K(d) approximately 37 microm for GSP-6' and K(d) approximately 50 microm for GSP-6"). Binding of GSP-6' and GSP-6" to P-selectin required fucosylation and, to a lesser extent, sialylation as well as the sulfated peptide backbone of GSP-6' and GSP-6". These results demonstrate that contrary to expectations, a core 2 O-glycan containing sialylated PFPL does not promote high affinity binding of PSGL-1 to P-selectin.  相似文献   

17.
P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) interactions with selectins regulate leukocyte migration in inflammatory lesions. In mice, selectin ligand activity regulating leukocyte recruitment and lymphocyte homing into lymph nodes results from the sum of unequal contributions of fucosyltransferase (FucT)-IV and FucT-VII, with FucT-VII playing a predominant role. Here we have examined the role of human FucT-IV and -VII in conferring L-selectin, P-selectin, and E-selectin binding activities to PSGL-1. Lewis x (Le(x)) carbohydrate was generated at the CHO(dhfr)(-) cell surface by FucT-IV expression, whereas sialyl Le(x) (sLe(x)) was synthesized by FucT-VII. Both human FucT-IV and -VII had the ability to generate carbohydrate ligands that support L-selectin-, P-selectin-, and E-selectin-dependent rolling on PSGL-1, with FucT-VII playing a major role. Cooperation was observed between FucT-IV and -VII in recruiting L-, P-, or E-selectin-expressing cells on PSGL-1 and in regulating cell rolling velocity and stability. Additional rolling adhesion assays were performed to assess the role of Thr-57-linked core-2 O-glycans in supporting L-selectin-, P-selectin-, and E-selectin-dependent rolling on PSGL-1. These studies confirmed that core-2 O-glycans attached to Thr-57 play a critical role in supporting L- and P-selectin-dependent rolling and revealed that additional binding sites support >75% of E-selectin-mediated rolling. The observations presented here indicate that human FucT-IV and -VII both contribute and cooperate in regulating L-selectin-, P-selectin-, and E-selectin-dependent rolling on PSGL-1, with FucT-VII playing a predominant role in conferring selectin binding activity to PSGL-1.  相似文献   

18.
The selective interaction of neutrophils with E-selectin and eosinophils with P-selectin has been previously reported, but the relevance of selectin site density and fluid shear has not been studied in detail. We have developed a new approach to examine these interactions in cell suspensions that integrates an on-line cone-plate viscometer with a flow cytometer. We find that eosinophils and neutrophils both use P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 to form stable conjugates with P-selectin Chinese hamster ovary cell transfectants, with a preferential adhesion of eosinophils. Further, the difference in cell adhesion between neutrophils and eosinophils is magnified at P-selectin expression levels below approximately 20 sites/microm2, a range likely to be relevant to endothelial cell expression levels in conditions associated with eosinophilia. The unique behavior is retained over shear rates ranging from 100 to 1500/s but is magnified at low shear. Results from parallel-plate flow chamber assays suggest that preferential eosinophil adhesion reflects an enhanced efficiency of initial PSGL-1 bond formation with P-selectin rather than a unique ability of eosinophils to mediate rolling interactions of longer duration on low-density P-selectin substrates. These differences may account in part for the increase in eosinophil accumulation in allergic diseases.  相似文献   

19.
The L- and E-selectins are leukocyte and endothelial cell surface molecules which mediate leukocyte-endothelial cell adhesion by interacting with carbohydrate ligands. In the present study we find that L-selectin, like E-selectin, can interact with synthetic neoglycoproteins containing Sialyl Le(x) (Neu5Ac alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-4[Fuc alpha 1-3]GlcNAc beta-R), or Sialyl Le(a) (Neu5Ac-alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-3[Fuc alpha 1-4]GlcNAc beta-R). Additionally, both the E-selectin and L-selectin can bind the peripheral lymph node addressin, a high endothelial venule ligand for L-selectin. Despite overlapping interactions, the L- and E-selectins discriminate between their native ligands. The peripheral lymph node addressin is a preferential ligand for L-selectin; and furthermore, L-selectin expressing cells do not interact detectably with the cutaneous lymphocyte antigen, a native glycoprotein ligand for E-selectin found on a subset of lymphocytes associated with the skin.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of cell density and retinoic acid-induced differentiation on the class and molecular species composition of mouse neuroblastoma NB2a cell glycosphingolipids were examined under conditions where the period of culture was controlled. The total amount of neutral glycosphingolipids per cell decreased both with differentiation and as the cells became confluent. The relative amount of the neutral glycosphingolipid classes was not affected by differentiation, whereas there were small but significant changes in the relative amount of the neutral glycosphingolipid classes as the cells became confluent. The total amount of the gangliosides was unaffected by either differentiation or cell density, but there were significant changes in the ganglioside class composition as a result of both cell density and differentiation, and the effects were additive. The molecular species of all the major neutral glycosphingolipid and ganglioside classes were essentially identical, and were altered only slightly by either differentiation or cell density.  相似文献   

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