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The emigration of leukocytes from the bloodstream into a site of inflammation involves a series of interactions between cell adhesion molecules (CAMs)1 on the leukocyte and the venular endothelium. This phenomenon has been dissected into discrete steps of rolling, activation, tight adhesion, transmigration, and migration across the basement membrane (1–4). If a relevant leukocyte or endothelial CAM is inhibited, leukocytes do not proceed to the next step. During transendothelial migration (TEM), the leukocytes squeeze between tightly apposed endothelial cells. This process involves the function of platelet–endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM, CD31), a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily, which is expressed on the surfaces of monocytes (Mo), granulocytes, NK cells, some T cell subsets, and concentrated at the borders between endothelial cells (5–7).
In the presence of appropriate anti-PECAM mAbs, leukocytes can bind tightly to endothelial monolayers and migrate to the endothelial junctions, but they do not proceed through the junctions (8, 9). This process is reversible since diapedesis resumes shortly after removing the blocking mAb (8). Transmigration appears to involve homophilic interaction of PECAM on the leukocyte with PECAM on the endothelial cell. Blocking the PECAM on either cell is sufficient to maximally block TEM in vitro; blocking PECAM on both cells has no additional effect (8).
Depending on the leukocyte type and the inflammatory stimulus, more than one CAM can participate in each of the steps of rolling, activation, and tight adhesion (1, 10). Thus, it is difficult to block inflammation using individual reagents directed at the particular molecules involved in these steps. In contrast, PECAM mediates a common final step in emigration for many leukocyte types activated by a variety of stimuli. In addition, PECAM has no other known function in vivo. Most of the other CAMs important in emigration of leukocytes have other roles in the immune system (1, 11), the blockade of which could lead to untoward consequences.
Therefore, PECAM is an attractive target molecule for antiinflammatory therapy. In fact, mAbs (12) and polyclonal antibodies (13–15) against PECAM block acute inflammation in response to a variety of stimuli. However, xenogeneic mAb has the potential to opsonize leukocytes, leading to leukopenia, as well as to stimulate production of neutralizing antibodies by the host, making it a poor agent for chronic therapy. Moreover, engagement of CAMs by high affinity mAbs can activate cells, especially leukocytes. Ligation of leukocyte PECAM by a variety of mAbs can trigger an adhesion cascade resulting in the upregulation of leukocyte integrin binding activity on T cells (16), PMN, Mo (17), and NK cells (9, 18).
To avoid these potential problems, we fused portions of the extracellular region of autologous PECAM to the human Fc chain. These soluble chimeras competitively inhibit TEM in vitro and in vivo. A chimera containing only PECAM domain 1, which is incapable of binding stably to cellular PECAM, blocks emigration of both PMN and monocytes into the inflamed peritoneal cavity. This is the first demonstration that a portion of a CAM with no stable binding activity itself can block inflammation in vivo.
Monocyte-selective Transendothelial Migration Assay
Construction and Production of Chimeric Ig Fusion Proteins
Murine PECAM-IgG Proteins.
CD14-IgG cDNA Fusion Plasmid.
PECAM-IgM Fusion Plasmid.
To produce soluble fusion proteins, L cell fibroblasts were stably transfected by electroporation (23) with cDNAs encoding each of the constructs and selected in 0.5 mg/ml G418. Clones were picked and transplanted to 96-well trays. Supernates from these clones were tested by ELISA for expression of human IgG or IgM. Positive clones were expanded, subcloned, and tested for production of the appropriate PECAM domains by mAb-binding ELISA (4), and for size by Western blotting.
Cultures were weaned to growth in 1.5% FCS and expanded to roller bottle culture. Three to four liters of conditioned medium from transfectant cultures were pooled. PECAM-IgG was purified by affinity chromatography on protein A–Sepharose; PECAMIgM was purified by affinity chromatography on hec7-Sepharose. Proteins were eluted with 0.1 M glycine buffer, pH 2.5, neutralized, and dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline. When necessary, purified protein was concentrated using centricon membranes (Amicon, Beverly, MA). Chimeric proteins were filter sterilized. All mAb and chimeric protein reagents used in these experiments were free of detectable endotoxin (<0.1 endotoxin units) by limulus amebocyte lysate assay (BioWhittaker, Inc., Walkersville, MD).
FACS® Analysis.
Thioglycollate Broth-induced Peritonitis.
Statistics.
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Cell Culture
Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were isolated from fresh umbilical veins and cultured in medium 199 (M199; GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) + 20% normal human serum on hydrated collagen gels as described previously (5). Cells were used at passage two. For experiments involving FACS® (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA) analysis of chimeric proteins bearing the human IgG Fc region, HUVEC were cultured in 20% fetal bovine serum (LPS-free; Hyclone Labs., Logan, UT).
The details of this assay have been previously published (8, 19). Transendothelial migration was quantitated by Nomarski optics as described previously (4, 8). In some experiments, transmigration was also quantitated on cross sections of paraffin-embedded monolayers. These specimens were prepared by carefully removing replicate sample monolayers and placing the endothelial surfaces against each other with the collagen gel sides facing outward. This avoided mechanical dislodgement of cells during the embedding process. After substitution in wax, the specimens were bisected so that cuts through the specimen produced cross sections of four monolayer samples (two different portions of each of the two monolayers). Quantitation was performed on three levels of such specimens separated by at least 50 µm so that different areas of the specimen would be sampled and the same cells would not be counted twice.
Truncated Human PECAM-IgG.
Construction of the set of human PECAM-IgG chimeras has been described previously (4). The novel human PECAM-IgG chimera consisting of domains 3–6 was made using a similar PCR strategy. The sequences of the primer pair used in generating the DNA fragment corresponding to domains 3–6 were: 5'-TAG ATC GAT ATC GAA GGA GCT CAG CTC-3' and 5'-TAG AAT ATC GCG GCC GCT TTC TTC CAT-3', with the EcoRV and NotI sequences indicated in bold.
A full-length soluble PECAMIgG cDNA was constructed by ligating the cDNA encoding the extracellular portion of murine PECAM (20) with a cDNA encoding the human IgG1 Fc domain, in a similar fashion to the construction of human PECAM-IgG (4). This was subcloned into pcDNAI/neo (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA) at the SalI and XbaI sites. A PCR cloning strategy similar to that used to make the human truncated PECAM-IgGs (4) was used to construct the murine counterparts with the full-length PECAM-IgG cDNA used as the template. The sequence of the 5' PCR primer was 5'-TCA GAA GCT TCC ACC ATG CTC CTG-3'. The HindIII restriction sequence is in bold; the initiation codon is underlined. The sequence of the 3' primer for producing the first domain of murine PECAM was 5'-TAG AAT ATC GCG GCC GCT TCT GTC ACC TCC TT-3'. The NotI restriction site is in bold.
The CD14-IgG cDNA fusion plasmid was a gift of Dr. Henri Lichenstein (Amgen, Inc., Boulder, CO). The CD14-IgG insert (21) was retrieved from the original pSPORT vector by XbaI and SalI digestions, bluntended, and transferred to the EcoRV site of the selectable mammalian expression vector, pcDNAI/neo.
Construction of the PECAM-IgM fusion plasmid was based on a patented vector, pm2CD2IgM, gpt (American Type Culture Collection accession No. 68280, provided by Dr. M.F. Concino of Procept, Inc., Cambridge, MA). This vector contains the CH2 + CH3 + CH4 domains of human IgM fused to the extracellular portion of CD2 (22). The IgM portion was generated from the vector by PCR using the following pair of frame-retaining oligonucleotide primers containing NotI and XbaI restriction sequences: 5'-AAT ACA TAG AGG CCG CCA GTG ATT GCT GAG CTG-3' and 5'-GGG TTT CTA GAA GCC ACT-3'. The NotI and XbaI restriction sequences, respectively, are printed in bold; the first five codons of the IgM are underlined. PECAM-IgM constructs were made from the corresponding PECAM-IgG pcDNAI/Neo vectors by replacing the IgG portion with IgM cDNA at the NotI and XbaI sites.
FACS® analysis was performed with Consort 30 software. Nonenzymatically resuspended HUVEC or freshly isolated PBMC were incubated with mAb or PECAM-IgG chimeras on ice for 30 min, washed gently, and then incubated with F(ab')2 fragments of FITC-labeled rabbit anti–mouse IgG or FITC-labeled goat anti–human IgG for 30 min on ice. Cells were then washed and analyzed. At least 10,000 cells were collected for each sample. PBMC were preincubated with mAb IV.3 and 3G8 (Medarex, Inc., Annandale, NJ) against Fc
R II and III, respectively. Monocytes were selectively analyzed in the PBMC samples using appropriate forward- and side-scatter gates, which were confirmed using monocyte-specific markers. Graphs were produced using WinList software for curve smoothing.
These studies were performed and analyzed as previously described (12), except that thioglycollate was injected 1 h after intravenous administration of control or anti-PECAM reagents. Measurements (animal weight; peritoneal lavage volume, cell density, and differential count; peripheral blood count and smear; general autopsy) were performed at 4, 18, or 24 h, as indicated in the figures. Representative sections of bowel and mesentery were submitted for histologic sections, which were stained with hematoxylin and eosin, and scored in a blinded manner for leukocyte adhesion to the walls of postcapillary venules as previously described (12).
The figures show representative experiments from the many of each type performed. The bars give the mean ± standard error for five to six replicates of each variable tested. Since the data involved nonparametric independent samples, statistical significance was tested by the Mann-Whitney U test.
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Results
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
PECAM-IgG Binds Homophilically to Endothelial Cell PECAM.
The extracellular portion of PECAM is composed of six immunoglobulin domains (6). Full-length PECAMIgG (i.e., domains 1–6 fused to IgG) and truncated versions all migrated on SDS-PAGE at the appropriate relative molecular mass values for dimers of the expected size, and all were recognized by CD31 mAb whose epitopes were included in their sequence, but not by CD31 mAb with epitopes on domains not included in the constructs (reference 4 and data not shown.) Full-length PECAM-IgG bound stably enough to HUVEC to be detectable by FACScan® analysis (Fig. 1). As had been demonstrated previously (24), this binding represents homophilic adhesion to PECAM on the HUVEC, since it was inhibitable by hec7 Fab, which binds to PECAM domains 1 and/or 2, but not by mAb P1.2, which binds to PECAM domain 6 or mAb 7E3 (25), a blocking mAb against
vβ3 (Fig. 1 a). Binding to monocytes, which express an order of magnitude less PECAM than HUVEC (26), was low (three times background; Fig. 1 c) to undetectable above background in seven separate experiments with seven different blood donors.
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Figs. 5 and 6 show data from two experiments representative of five. The peritoneal cavities of unstimulated mice contain negligible numbers of PMN. Thioglycollate induced an acute inflammatory response in the peritoneal cavity of these mice, which could be blocked by mPECAM-IgG at both 4 and 24 h, reducing the numbers of emigrated PMN to 47 and 25% of control, respectively. This inhibition was equivalent to that produced by optimal concentrations of the blocking antimurine PECAM mAb 2H8 and similar to that produced by anti-CD11b mAb 5C6, which have been demonstrated to block in this model (12, 28) and served as our positive controls (Fig. 5). A quantitatively similar block has been produced in a rat model of acute peritonitis using a cross-reacting rabbit anti–human PECAM antibody (13).
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80%. In four experiments, mPECAM domain 1-IgG blocked PMN influx by 86 ± 8%.
The unstimulated peritoneal cavity in the FVB/N strain contains
5 x 105 mononuclear phagocytes/ml. In the experiment shown in Fig. 6, the number of Mo recruited into the peritoneal cavity had already risen to over 1.5 x 106/ ml (
8 x 106 total) by 18 h after thioglycollate stimulation in mice that received the control fusion protein CD14IgG. In contrast, those mice treated with either full-length or domain 1 mPECAM-IgG or mAb 5C6 had basal levels of mononuclear phagocytes in their peritoneal cavities.
The number of circulating leukocytes was similar in all experimental groups that received thioglycollate stimulation (data not shown). Thus, the decrease in leukocytes entering the peritoneal cavity was not due to their sequestration or destruction as a consequence of treatment.
Histologic sections of the peritoneal viscera of these mice were examined. In the venules from mice treated with mPECAM-IgG (both full-length and domain 1 only) a large proportion of the leukocytes in the profile were noted to be in apparent contact with the lumenal endothelium (Fig. 7, a–c). This was not seen in the venules of mice treated with control CD14-IgG fusion protein nor anti-CD11b mAb (Fig. 7, d and e).
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PECAM-IgG Chimeric Proteins.
Other investigators have used chimeras of adhesion molecules fused with IgG to study adhesive interactions in inflammation (29–32). The bivalent nature of the molecules increases the binding affinity, and the immunoglobulin chain prolongs the biological half-life in vivo (33). While there are some well-known examples involving selectins (29, 32, 34), there are few reports on the use of CAMs from other molecular families fused to IgG to block inflammation in vivo (33, 35). This may be because most CAMs have a rather low affinity for interaction with their ligands on a molecule-to-molecule basis (27). Many immunoglobulin superfamily–Ig chimeras only function when they are immobilized to a surface, allowing multivalent interactions to occur (30, 31).
Full-length PECAM-IgG chimeras bind stably to HUVEC, but not to Mo, which bear 10-fold less PECAM (26). Consistent with this, high surface expression is apparently required for homophilic PECAM cell–cell adhesion (reference 36 and our unpublished data). Truncated forms of PECAM do not bind stably enough even to HUVEC to be detected by FACS® (Fig. 1). Sun et al. (24) demonstrated that domains 1 and 2 were necessary for homophilic binding under these conditions. They are sufficient to mediate homophilic binding, but only when expressed on a fulllength Ig superfamily backbone. Fawcett et al. also found that only full-length PECAM molecules supported stable adhesion (37).
Several controls demonstrated that the effects we observed with our PECAM-IgG chimeras were not due to the interaction of the IgG portion of the molecule with leukocyte Fc receptors; a full-length CD14 molecule and the PECAM domain 3–6 construct had no effect on TEM when fused to the same IgG molecule. On the other hand, both full-length and domain 1 + 2 of PECAM fused to the human IgM COOH tail blocked TEM. Furthermore, no Fc-mediated binding of the truncated PECAM-IgGs or the CD14-IgG to monocytes was detected by FACScan® (Fig. 1). There was no evidence that infusion of murine PECAM- IgG chimeras resulted in opsonization of leukocytes, consistent with previous experience using other CAM-IgG chimeras in vivo (29, 34). For therapeutic purposes, Fcmediated interactions could be further precluded by design of a chimera with the opsonic portions of the Fc chain deleted (38).
Identifying the Domains of PECAM Used by Endothelial Cells.
As expected from previous studies using mAbs (8), no block in TEM was seen when either mAb or PECAMIgG were added to the apical surface of the HUVEC monolayers for 1 h before washing the monolayer surface (Fig. 4). Since both hec7 mAb and D1-6 IgG are capable of binding tightly to endothelial PECAM, this observation suggests that these reagents were not accessible to PECAM sequestered in the junctions of the endothelial monolayer. Therefore, the block mediated by these reagents when added to the monocytes in suspension above the HUVEC monolayer must be due to interaction of the reagents with the monocytes. If we then reasonably assume that PECAMIgG, including D1-IgG, is mimicking endothelial PECAM in these interactions, these data provide evidence that domain 1 and/or 2 are crucial for the role of endothelial cell PECAM in transmigration.
Since we have previously demonstrated that domains 1 and/or 2 of monocyte PECAM are required for TEM (4), it seems most likely that domain 1 and/or 2 on both leukocyte and endothelial PECAM interact with each other in a homophilic manner during TEM. In support of this, the effects of blocking these domains on both the endothelial cell and the Mo simultaneously, are not additive (reference 8 and data not shown).
The Site of PECAM Blockade.
The block in TEM obtained with PECAM-IgGs both in vitro and in vivo resembles the block obtained with mAbs against PECAM both quantitatively and qualitatively. In our culture system, Mo were seen to be tightly bound to the apical surface of HUVEC monolayers over the junctions as in reference 8, while in the murine venules in the inflamed mesentery showed leukocytes in contact with the endothelial cell lining, as if arrested before diapedesis (Figs. 7 and 8), as we had previously seen with mAb 2H8 (12). It is notable that the epitope for mAb 2H8 is in domain 1 of murine PECAM.
Thus, soluble domain 1 of PECAM, which is incapable of high affinity binding to cellular PECAM, can mimic the effects of a blocking antibody without the potential complications associated with immune complex formation. This work defines domain 1 of PECAM as a target for therapeutic intervention.
| Acknowledgments |
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Supported by National Institutes of Health grant RO1 HL46849 and an Established Investigator Award from the American Heart Association to W.A. Muller.
Submitted: 2 January 1997
Revised: 5 February 1997
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