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1.
A membrane glycoprotein of 24,000 Da (gp24) was purified from developed cells of Dictyostelium discoideum and shown to neutralize a crude antiserum (R695) that blocks EDTA-sensitive cell-cell adhesion during the early developmental stages of this organism. Purified gp24 was used to raise rabbit polyclonal antibodies and mouse monoclonal antibodies. Rabbit antiserum R851 was shown to be highly specific to gp24 by both Western analysis and immunoprecipitation. IgG of R851 is able to block adhesion of dissociated cells swirled in suspension. Adhesion of wild-type cells is blocked by R851 antibodies during the first 8 hr of development but not thereafter when other adhesion mechanisms come into play. The glycoprotein gp80 plays an essential role in the second adhesion system that appears during the aggregation stage of D. discoideum. By adding both anti-gp24 and anti-gp80 antibodies, adhesion of aggregation stage cells could be blocked. Late in development a third adhesion mechanism appears that is not blocked by either antibodies to gp24 or gp80 or both antibodies together. Western analysis and immunoprecipitation with monoclonal antibody mLJ11, specific for gp24, indicated that gp24 is absent in cells growing exponentially on bacteria but is rapidly synthesized and accumulated following the initiation of development. Synthesis of gp24 is maximal during the first 4 hr of development and then continues at a reduced rate throughout the remainder of development. The coordinate appearance of gp24 and EDTA-sensitive cell-cell adhesion as well as the ability of this glycoprotein to neutralize the adhesion blocking activity of R695 and R851 antibodies indicates that it plays a role in early cell-cell adhesion.  相似文献   

2.
R1-20, a novel mAb reacting with a cell surface Ag on normal human lymphocytes and leukemic cell lines, was shown to induce homotypic cell aggregation in leukemic cell lines. This phenomenon was specific to mAb R1-20 because antibodies recognizing CD2, CD7, CD28, and HLA-ABC failed to exhibit homotypic cell aggregation. Induction of aggregation by mAb R1-20 occurred at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C and required cytoskeletal integrity. Sodium azide, a metabolic inhibitor, had no effect on the aggregation. Distinct from lymphocyte function-associated Ag-1/intercellular adhesion molecule-1 interaction in which divalent cations are essential elements, R1-20-mediated aggregation was not abolished with EDTA treatment. The R1-20 Ag was determined as a molecule of M(r) 100 to 110 kDa in immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting methods, under both reducing and nonreducing conditions. The molecular composition is quite different from that of any known integrin molecule. The R1-20 Ag was expressed on resting and activated T Lymphocytes as well as on normal B lymphocytes. Monocytes and granulocytes had no detectable R1-20 Ag. Among the leukemia-derived cell lines we used, mAb R1-20 reacted with 18 of 32 T cell lines, 2 of 20 B cell lines, 2 of 3 non-T-non-B cell lines, 2 of 7 myelomonocytic cell lines, and 2 of 3 nonlymphoid-nonmyeloid cell lines. All EBV-transformed B cell lines examined (10 cell lines) were R1-20+. The spectrum of reactivity among the cell lines tested was different from that of known antiadhesion antibodies tested. All these findings indicate that the Ag recognized by mAb R1-20 may represent a new type of cell adhesion molecule.  相似文献   

3.
A 90-kD lymphocyte surface glycoprotein, defined by monoclonal antibodies of the Hermes series, is involved in lymphocyte recognition of high endothelial venules (HEV). Lymphocyte gp90Hermes binds in a saturable, reversible fashion to the mucosal vascular addressin (MAd), a tissue-specific endothelial cell adhesion molecule for lymphocytes. We and others have recently shown that the Hermes antigen is identical to or includes CD44 (In[Lu]-related p80), human Pgp-1, and extracellular matrix receptor III-molecules reportedly expressed on diverse cell types. Here, we examine the relationship between lymphoid and nonlymphoid Hermes antigens using serologic, biochemical, and, most importantly, functional assays. Consistent with studies using mAbs to CD44 or Pgp-1, mAbs against five different epitopes on lymphocyte gp90Hermes reacted with a wide variety of nonhematolymphoid cells in diverse normal human tissues, including many types of epithelium, mesenchymal elements such as fibroblasts and smooth muscle, and a subset of glia in the central nervous system. To ask whether these non-lymphoid molecules might also be functionally homologous to lymphocyte homing receptors, we assessed their ability to interact with purified MAd using fluorescence energy transfer techniques. The Hermes antigen isolated from both glial cells and fibroblasts--which express a predominant 90-kD form similar in relative molecular mass, isoelectric point, and protease sensitivity to lymphocyte gp90Hermes--was able to bind purified MAd. In contrast, a 140-160-kD form of the Hermes antigen isolated from squamous epithelial cells lacked this capability. Like lymphocyte binding to mucosal HEV, the interaction between glial gp90Hermes and MAd is inhibited by mAb Hermes-3, but not Hermes-1, suggesting that similar molecular domains are involved in the two binding events. The observation that the Hermes/CD44 molecules derived from several nonlymphoid cell types display binding domains homologous to those of lymphocyte homing receptors suggests that these glycoproteins represent a novel type of cell adhesion/recognition molecule (H-CAM) potentially mediating cell-cell or cell-matrix interactions in multiple tissues.  相似文献   

4.
Previous studies of the adhesive properties of embryonic chick neural retina cells indicate a gradual decrease in the expression of calcium-dependent adhesions during retinal histogenesis, a function which has been attributed in part to gp130/4.8, a retinal calcium-dependent adhesion-associated cell surface membrane glycoprotein with a molecular weight of approximately 130 kDa and an isoelectric point of 4.8 (G. B. Grunwald, R. Pratt, and J. Lilien, 1982, J. Cell Sci. 55, 69-83). The experiments described here were done to define the relationship of gp130/4.8 to N-cadherin, another calcium-dependent adhesion molecule found in chick retina, which has a reported molecular weight of 127 kDa and which is recognized by monoclonal antibody NCD-2 (K. Hatta and M. Takeichi, 1986, Nature (London) 320, 447-449). Using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by Western blotting as well as quantitative solid-phase immunoassays, polyspecific antisera recognizing gp130/4.8 were compared with monoclonal antibody NCD-2 for reactivity with proteins of retina and other tissues. The data lead us to conclude that retinal calcium-dependent adhesion proteins gp130/4.8 and N-cadherin are likely to be the same molecule. In order to obtain evidence for a direct correlation of changes in expression of these adhesion proteins with changes in retinal cell adhesivity and related morphogenetic events, parallel studies were carried out with cells from various ocular tissues to examine the functional, biochemical, and immunohistochemical expression of N-cadherin during ocular development. Immunohistochemical mapping of N-cadherin in the developing chick eye reveals three modes of N-cadherin expression which occur simultaneously in different ocular tissues: (1) down-regulation, (2) up-regulation, and (3) steady-state expression. These patterns of expression correlate with changes in the adhesive behavior of cells as well as with discrete stages in the morphogenesis of several ocular tissues. The results suggest that N-cadherin is a versatile cell adhesion protein with a role in both the development of several ocular tissues and the maintenance of specialized structures in the mature eye.  相似文献   

5.
Adhesion molecule on glia (AMOG) is a novel neural cell adhesion molecule that mediates neuron-astrocyte interaction in vitro. In situ AMOG is expressed in the cerebellum by glial cells at the critical developmental stages of granule neuron migration. Granule neuron migration that is guided by surface contacts between migrating neurons and astroglial processes is inhibited by monoclonal AMOG antibody, probably by disturbing neuron-glia adhesion. AMOG is an integral cell surface glycoprotein of 45-50-kD molecular weight with a carbohydrate content of at least 30%. It does not belong to the L2/HNK-1 family of neural cell adhesion molecules but expresses another carbohydrate epitope that is shared with the adhesion molecules L1 and myelin-associated glycoprotein, but is not present on N-CAM or J1.  相似文献   

6.
From the cell membranes of the sponge Geodia cydonium a component was isolated and purified which inhibits the aggregation factor isolated from the same source; the component was termed anti-aggregation receptor. This molecule was characterized as a glycoprotein (54% neutral carbohydrate) and its molecular weight is in the range of 180,000 One biological site of the anti-aggregation receptor was determined to be D-galactose. Indirect evidence presented seems to indicate that this molecule is present in an active form in aggregation-deficient cells and absent in aggregation-susceptible cells.  相似文献   

7.
Cell-cell adhesion is essential for the appropriate immune response, differentiation, and migration of lymphocytes. This important physiological event is reflected in vitro by homotypic cell aggregation. We have previously reported that a 120 kDa cell surface glycoprotein, JL1, is a unique protein specifically expressed by immature double positive (DP) human thymocytes which are in the process of positive and negative selections through the interaction between thymocyte and antigen-presenting cells (APCs). The function of the JL1 molecule, however, is yet to be identified. We show here that anti-JL1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) induced the homotypic aggregation of human thymocytes in a temperature- and Mg2+-dependent manner. It required an intact cytoskeleton and the interaction between leucocyte function associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) since it was blocked by cytochalasin B and D, and mAb against LFA-1 and ICAM-1 which are known to be involved in the aggregation of thymocytes. Translocation of phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) through the cell membrane was not detected, implying that the molecular mechanism of JL-1-induced homotypic aggregation is different from that of CD99-induced homotypic aggregation. In summary, JL1 is a cell surface molecule that induces homotypic adhesion mediated by the LFA-1 and ICAM-1 interaction and cytoskeletal reorganization. These findings suggest that JL1 may be an important regulator of thymocyte development and thymocyte-APC interaction.  相似文献   

8.
Binding of ligands that contain Arg-Gly-Asp to adhesion receptors induces cell spreading and aggregation and alters gene expression, possibly due to conformational changes within occupied adhesion receptors. PMI-1 is a monoclonal antibody which reacts with the platelet fibrinogen receptor, glycoprotein IIb-IIIa, and reports such a conformational change. ADP stimulation of platelets results in a fibrinogen-dependent increase in binding of the PMI-1 antibody. Peptides containing Arg-Gly-Asp also reversibly increase the binding of this antibody to cells and to purified glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. The PMI-1 antibody inhibits platelet adhesion and spreading on certain substrata (Shadle, P. J., Ginsberg, M. H., Plow, E. F., and Barondes, S. H. (1984) J. Cell Biol. 99, 2056-2060); thus this occupancy-modulated site may participate in adhesive function.  相似文献   

9.
E-cadherin is a Ca2+-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecule identified as a glycoprotein with a molecular weight (MW) of 124,000. To study the role of the sugar moieties of this adhesion molecule, we tested the effect of tunicamycin on aggregation mediated by E-cadherin of teratocarcinoma cells. Immunoblot analysis using a monoclonal antibody to E-cadherin showed that in cells treated with tunicamycin this adhesion molecule is converted into two forms with MW of 118,000 and 131,000. The smaller one was exposed on the cell surface and showed a trypsin sensitivity characteristic to E-cadherin, suggesting that this is the peptide moiety of E-cadherin whose glycosylation with N-linked oligosaccharides was blocked by tunicamycin. The larger one was not removed by trypsin treatment of cells, suggesting an intracellular location. These tunicamycin-treated cells aggregated in a Ca2+-dependent manner, and the aggregation was inhibited by a monoclonal antibody to E-cadherin. These results suggested that N-linked oligosaccharides are not involved in the functional sites of this adhesion molecule.  相似文献   

10.
PECAM-1, a cell adhesion molecule of the immunoglobulin gene (Ig) superfamily, has been implicated in white cell transmigration, integrin activation on lymphocytes, and cell-cell adhesion. The purpose of this investigation was to identify specific regions of the PECAM-1 extracellular domain mediating these functions by identifying the location of epitopes of bioactive anti-PECAM-1 monoclonal antibodies. The binding regions of mAbs important in PECAM-1-mediated leukocyte transmigration (Hec 7.2 and 3D2) were mapped to N-terminal Ig-like domains. The epitopes of monoclonal antibodies that activated integrin function on lymphocytes were dispersed over the entire extracellular region, but those that had the strongest activating effect were preferentially localized to the N-terminus of the molecule. The binding regions of mAbs that blocked PECAM-1-mediated heterophilic L-cell aggregation were located either in Ig-like domain 2 (NIH31.4) or Ig-like domain 6 (4G6 and 1.2). Site-directed mutagenesis further pinpointed the epitope of the 4G6 mAb to a hexapeptide, CAVNEG, within Ig-like domain 6.

These results demonstrate that PECAM-1 contains multiple functional domains. Regions within N-terminal Ig-like domains appear to be required for transmigration. In contrast, two distinct regions were implicated in L-cell mediated heterophilic aggregation.  相似文献   

11.
The spleens of patients with hairy cell leukemia contain high levels of a tartrate-insensitive, cationic, acid phosphatase (the human Type 5 isozyme). This phosphatase has been purified by a procedure which involves only two chromatographic steps: CM-cellulose chromatography and immunoaffinity chromatography on sheep antibodies generated against porcine uteroferrin. Uteroferrin is an abundant iron-containing acid phosphatase that can be recovered readily from porcine uterine secretions. Like uteroferrin, the purified human Type 5 phosphatase is a glycoprotein of molecular weight about 34,000. It contains two atoms of iron/molecule. The human phosphatase and uteroferrin also resemble each other closely in electrophoretic mobility, substrate specificity, and response to a variety of activators and inhibitors. Mouse monoclonal antibodies have been raised to uteroferrin and to the human Type 5 phosphatase. Three monoclonal antibodies which bind with high affinities to distinct sites on the uteroferrin molecule also recognize the human spleen enzyme, but bind to it with much lower affinity. These antibodies also recognize cationic acid phosphatases purified from bovine and rat spleens. A monoclonal antibody raised against the human enzyme, but selected for binding to uteroferrin, appears to recognize a relatively conserved site on all four phosphatases. We conclude that the human Type 5 isozyme belongs to a growing class of structurally related, iron-containing acid phosphatases which includes the iron-transport protein, uteroferrin.  相似文献   

12.
Upon starvation the cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium purpureum, develops a form of cell-cell adhesion aiding in the formation of large multicellular aggregates, which are capable of further differentiation. The molecule that mediates this adhesion is a glycoprotein of Mr approximately 40,000. The protein shares a common carbohydrate epitope with another well-characterized cell adhesion molecule from Dictyostelium discoideum, contact sites A, but the polypeptides to which it is attached differ for each species. Although mediating a developmental form of adhesiveness, the protein is synthesized in vegetative cells at a time when they do not adhere. Most of the vegetative protein is associated with cell membranes and appears to be on the surface of these cells. The protein is compared to other cell adhesion molecules from other species of cellular slime molds, and possible explanations for its inability to function in vegetative cells are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin (UM) was analysed by comparing antisera produced against the whole molecule (gp123) with antisera made against fragments of UM. Of the proteins recognized by different anti-UM antisera (molecular weights of 123, 102, 92 and 84 kDa), the 102 kDa molecule is not derived from gp123. The 102 kDa molecule is not glycosylated and is also different from gp123 by peptide map analysis. However, rabbit antisera raised against the purified 102 kDa protein interfered with the aggregation of embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. Also, a monoclonal antibody selected to interfere with EC cell aggregation recognized the 102 kDa molecule as well as gp123. Thus, the functional site of cell adhesion seems not to be mediated by sugar residues. Experimental evidence is provided suggesting that UM is not only involved in the compaction of preimplantation embryos but seems to be an ubiquitous cell adhesion molecule regulating epithelial cell adhesion mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
A cell surface glycoprotein of apparent Mr 150,000 (gp150) has been implicated in mediating EDTA-resistant cell-cell adhesion in Dictyostelium discoideum. A simple purification scheme making use of high-performance liquid chromatography has been devised to purify gp150 to near homogeneity. Purified gp150 was capable of neutralizing the effect of a rabbit antiserum raised against gel-purified gp150, which was previously reported to be a potent inhibitor of cell-cell adhesion (Geltosky, J. E., Weseman, J., Bakke, A., and Lerner, R. A. (1979) Cell 18, 391-398). The binding of 125I-labeled gp150 to intact cells was both dose-dependent and saturable, demonstrating the presence of specific cell surface binding sites for gp150. When reassociation of postaggregation stage cells was carried out in the presence of soluble gp150, aggregate formation was strongly inhibited. In contrast, gp150 failed to exert any effect on cells at the aggregation stage. The inhibitory effect of gp150 was sensitive to protease treatment, suggesting that the protein moiety is crucial to gp150 function. These results, taken together, provide direct evidence that gp150 is a cell-cell adhesion molecule involved in cell-cell binding in the postaggregation stage of Dictyostelium development.  相似文献   

15.
Evidence is presented that the IIb-IIIa glycoprotein complex, which functions as the receptor for fibrinogen on platelets and is central to platelet aggregation, is expressed on the surface of leukocytes where it may function as a receptor for fibronectin. F(ab')2 fragments of a monoclonal antibody, 25E11, raised against activated large granular lymphocytes, inhibited killing by natural killer cells, blocked the binding of fibronectin-coated particles by monocytes, and stimulated neutrophils to exhibit increased antibody-dependent killing. Immunoprecipitation studies of leukocytes and platelets, and the ability of 25E11 to inhibit platelet aggregation, identified the antigen as an epitope on the IIb-IIIa complex. This glycoprotein thus constitutes the first example of a receptor mediating both platelet aggregation and leukocyte adhesion.  相似文献   

16.
MY-174 is an IgM class monoclonal antibody originally established against chick PG-M/versican. The antibody specifically stains the photoreceptor layer, where we recently reported an absence of PG-M/versican. In this study, we re-characterized the antibody and identified the molecule that reacts to MY-174 at the photoreceptor layer. Immunohistochemistry localized the antigen to the matrix surrounding photoreceptors. A variety of glycosidase digestions showed that the antigen is the 150-kDa glycoprotein that has sialylated N- and O-linked glycoconjugates having a molecular mass of more than 30-kDa. The peptide sequences obtained from purified MY-174 antigen showed we had sequenced a full-length cDNA with an open reading frame of 2787 base pairs, encoding a polypeptide of 928 amino acids, with 56 and 54% identities to human and mouse sialoprotein associated with cones and rods (SPACRs), respectively, and with the structural features observed in SPACRs. The specific sialylated O-glycoconjugates here are involved in the epitope structure for MY-174. SPACR first appeared by embryonic days 15-16, and expression increased with developmental age, paralleling the adhesion between neural retina and retinal pigment epithelium. Thus, we concluded that the MY-174 antigen at the photoreceptor layer, a developmentally regulated glycoprotein, is identical to chick SPACR and may be involved in a novel system mediating adhesion between neural retina and retinal pigment epithelium.  相似文献   

17.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2747-2756
The immune function of granulocytes, monocytes, lymphocytes, and other specialized cells depends upon intercellular adhesion. In many cases the molecules mediating leukocyte cell adhesion belong to the Leu-CAM superfamily of adhesive molecules. To elucidate the events of homotypic aggregation in a quantitative fashion, we have examined the aggregation of neutrophils stimulated with formyl peptides, where aggregate formation is a transient reversible cell function. We have mathematically modeled the kinetics of aggregation using a linear model based on particle geometry and rates of aggregate formation and breakup. The time course was modeled as a three-phase process, each phase with distinct rate constants. Aggregate formation was measured on the flow cytometer; singlets and larger particles were distinguished using the intravital stain LDS-751. Aggregation proceeded rapidly after stimulation with formyl peptide (CHO-nle-leu-phe-nle-tyr-lys). The first phase lasted 30-60 s; this was modeled with the largest aggregation rate and smallest rate of disaggregation. Aggregate formation plateaued during the second phase which lasted up to 2.5 min. This phase was modeled with an aggregation rate nearly an order of magnitude less than that of the initial fast phase, whereas the disaggregation rate for this phase did not change significantly. A third phase where disaggregation predominated, lasted the remaining 2-3 min and was modeled with a four to fivefold increase of the disaggregation rate. The mechanism of cell-cell adhesion in the plateau phase was probed with the monoclonal antibody IB4 to the CD18 subunit of the adhesive receptor CR3. Based on these studies it appears that new aggregates do not form to a large degree after the first phase of aggregate formation is complete. However, new adhesive contact sites may form within the contact region of these adherent cells to keep the aggregates together.  相似文献   

18.
Human T lymphocyte adhesion to human endothelial cells is the initial event in T cell migration to areas of extravascular inflammation. The molecular basis for T cell-endothelial cell adhesion was investigated using two different cell-cell adhesion assays: a) a fluorescein cell-cell adhesion assay using nonadherent endothelial cells and fluorescein-labeled T lymphocytes, and b) a radionuclide cell-cell adhesion assay using adherent endothelial cells and 51Cr-labelled T cells. Both assay systems demonstrated comparable quantitative assessment of cell-cell adhesions. The assays were performed at 22 degrees C and adhesions were maximal at 30 min. The results of these adhesion assays confirmed previous reports that T cells adhere to endothelial cells. In addition, we have shown that T cells adhere only marginally to foreskin fibroblasts or bone marrow derived fibroblasts. T cell-endothelial cell adhesions were significantly stronger than either monocytes or B lymphoblastoid cells adhesion to endothelial cells. To demonstrate the molecular mechanisms involved in regulating T cell-endothelial cell adhesions, a panel of function-associated monoclonal antibodies (MAb) were tested for their ability to inhibit T cell adhesion. MAb reactive with the leukocyte surface glycoprotein LFA-1 significantly inhibited T cell-endothelial cell adhesions in both assay systems. In contrast, MAb directed at other surface antigens did not inhibit T cell adhesion. The involvement of the LFA-1 glycoprotein in T lymphocyte adhesion to endothelial cells suggest that the LFA-1 molecule may be important in the regulation of leukocyte interactions.  相似文献   

19.
PECAM-1 is a 130-120-kD integral membrane glycoprotein found on the surface of platelets, at endothelial intercellular junctions in culture, and on cells of myeloid lineage. Previous studies have shown that it is a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily and that antibodies against the bovine form of this protein (endoCAM) can inhibit endothelial cell-cell interactions. These data suggest that PECAM-1 may function as a vascular cell adhesion molecule. The function of this molecule has been further evaluated by transfecting cells with a full-length PECAM-1 cDNA. Transfected COS-7, mouse 3T3 and L cells expressed a 130-120-kD glycoprotein on their cell surface that reacted with anti-PECAM-1 polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. COS-7 and 3T3 cell transfectants formed cell-cell junctions that were highly enriched in PECAM-1, reminiscent of its distribution at endothelial cell-cell borders. In contrast, this protein remained diffusely distributed within the plasma membrane of PECAM-1 transfected cells that were in contact with mock transfectants. Mouse L cells stably transfected with PECAM-1 demonstrated calcium-dependent aggregation that was inhibited by anti-PECAM antibodies. These results demonstrate that PECAM-1 mediates cell-cell adhesion and support the idea that it may be involved in some of the interactive events taking place during thrombosis, wound healing, and angiogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Monoclonal antibodies were prepared against a putative cell-cell adhesion molecule, a surface glycoprotein with an apparent Mr of 80,000 (gp80), from Dictyostelium discoideum. Seven monoclonal antibodies directed against gp80 were characterized and found to fall into three distinct classes. Class I consisted of one monoclonal antibody, is monospecific for gp80, and probably recognizes the peptide portion of the molecule. This class was capable of blocking the EDTA-resistant contact sites effectively. Class II recognized the carbohydrate moiety of gp80 and cross-reacted with a large number of glycoproteins. These monoclonal antibodies partially inhibited cell reassociation. Class III recognized gp80 and one other glycoprotein of Mr 95,000. This class had no effect on cell-cell binding. The class I monoclonal antibody was most potent in inhibiting cell reassociation at the aggregation stage of development. Its effect decreased drastically as development progressed and became negligible by the culmination stage. These observations are consistent with a direct role of gp80 in cell-cell binding and suggest a transient function for gp80 at the aggregation stage.  相似文献   

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